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- Джордж Элиот
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- Стр. 532/572
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After
he
was
gone
,
Rosamond
tried
to
get
up
from
her
seat
,
but
fell
back
fainting
.
When
she
came
to
herself
again
,
she
felt
too
ill
to
make
the
exertion
of
rising
to
ring
the
bell
,
and
she
remained
helpless
until
the
girl
,
surprised
at
her
long
absence
,
thought
for
the
first
time
of
looking
for
her
in
all
the
down
-
stairs
rooms
.
Rosamond
said
that
she
had
felt
suddenly
sick
and
faint
,
and
wanted
to
be
helped
up
-
stairs
.
When
there
she
threw
herself
on
the
bed
with
her
clothes
on
,
and
lay
in
apparent
torpor
,
as
she
had
done
once
before
on
a
memorable
day
of
grief
.
Lydgate
came
home
earlier
than
he
had
expected
,
about
half
-
past
five
,
and
found
her
there
.
The
perception
that
she
was
ill
threw
every
other
thought
into
the
background
When
he
felt
her
pulse
,
her
eyes
rested
on
him
with
more
persistence
than
they
had
done
for
a
long
while
,
as
if
she
felt
some
content
that
he
was
there
.
He
perceived
the
difference
in
a
moment
,
and
seating
himself
by
her
put
his
arm
gently
under
her
,
and
bending
over
her
said
,
"
My
poor
Rosamond
!
has
something
agitated
you
?
"
Clinging
to
him
she
fell
into
hysterical
sobbings
and
cries
,
and
for
the
next
hour
he
did
nothing
but
soothe
and
tend
her
.
He
imagined
that
Dorothea
had
been
to
see
her
,
and
that
all
this
effect
on
her
nervous
system
,
which
evidently
involved
some
new
turning
towards
himself
,
was
due
to
the
excitement
of
the
new
impressions
which
that
visit
had
raised
.
"
Now
,
I
saw
in
my
dream
,
that
just
as
they
had
ended
their
talk
,
they
drew
nigh
to
a
very
miry
slough
,
that
was
in
the
midst
of
the
plain
;
and
they
,
being
heedless
,
did
both
fall
suddenly
into
the
bog
.
The
name
of
the
slough
was
Despond
.
"
—
BUNYAN
.
When
Rosamond
was
quiet
,
and
Lydgate
had
left
her
,
hoping
that
she
might
soon
sleep
under
the
effect
of
an
anodyne
,
he
went
into
the
drawing
-
room
to
fetch
a
book
which
he
had
left
there
,
meaning
to
spend
the
evening
in
his
work
-
room
,
and
he
saw
on
the
table
Dorothea
’
s
letter
addressed
to
him
.
He
had
not
ventured
to
ask
Rosamond
if
Mrs
.
Casaubon
had
called
,
but
the
reading
of
this
letter
assured
him
of
the
fact
,
for
Dorothea
mentioned
that
it
was
to
be
carried
by
herself
.
When
Will
Ladislaw
came
in
a
little
later
Lydgate
met
him
with
a
surprise
which
made
it
clear
that
he
had
not
been
told
of
the
earlier
visit
,
and
Will
could
not
say
,
"
Did
not
Mrs
.
Lydgate
tell
you
that
I
came
this
morning
?
"
"
Poor
Rosamond
is
ill
,
"
Lydgate
added
immediately
on
his
greeting
.
"
Not
seriously
,
I
hope
,
"
said
Will
.
"
No
—
only
a
slight
nervous
shock
—
the
effect
of
some
agitation
.
She
has
been
overwrought
lately
.
The
truth
is
,
Ladislaw
,
I
am
an
unlucky
devil
.
We
have
gone
through
several
rounds
of
purgatory
since
you
left
,
and
I
have
lately
got
on
to
a
worse
ledge
of
it
than
ever
.
I
suppose
you
are
only
just
come
down
—
you
look
rather
battered
—
you
have
not
been
long
enough
in
the
town
to
hear
anything
?
"