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- Стр. 572/572
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It
was
after
this
that
Mr
.
Brooke
came
,
and
meeting
the
Baronet
in
the
grounds
,
began
to
chat
with
him
in
ignorance
of
the
news
,
which
Sir
James
for
some
reason
did
not
care
to
tell
him
immediately
.
But
when
the
entail
was
touched
on
in
the
usual
way
,
he
said
,
"
My
dear
sir
,
it
is
not
for
me
to
dictate
to
you
,
but
for
my
part
I
would
let
that
alone
.
I
would
let
things
remain
as
they
are
.
"
Mr
.
Brooke
felt
so
much
surprised
that
he
did
not
at
once
find
out
how
much
he
was
relieved
by
the
sense
that
he
was
not
expected
to
do
anything
in
particular
.
Such
being
the
bent
of
Celia
’
s
heart
,
it
was
inevitable
that
Sir
James
should
consent
to
a
reconciliation
with
Dorothea
and
her
husband
.
Where
women
love
each
other
,
men
learn
to
smother
their
mutual
dislike
.
Sir
James
never
liked
Ladislaw
,
and
Will
always
preferred
to
have
Sir
James
’
s
company
mixed
with
another
kind
:
they
were
on
a
footing
of
reciprocal
tolerance
which
was
made
quite
easy
only
when
Dorothea
and
Celia
were
present
.
It
became
an
understood
thing
that
Mr
.
and
Mrs
.
Ladislaw
should
pay
at
least
two
visits
during
the
year
to
the
Grange
,
and
there
came
gradually
a
small
row
of
cousins
at
Freshitt
who
enjoyed
playing
with
the
two
cousins
Visiting
Tipton
as
much
as
if
the
blood
of
these
cousins
had
been
less
dubiously
mixed
.
Mr
.
Brooke
lived
to
a
good
old
age
,
and
his
estate
was
inherited
by
Dorothea
’
s
son
,
who
might
have
represented
Middlemarch
,
but
declined
,
thinking
that
his
opinions
had
less
chance
of
being
stifled
if
he
remained
out
of
doors
.
Sir
James
never
ceased
to
regard
Dorothea
’
s
second
marriage
as
a
mistake
;
and
indeed
this
remained
the
tradition
concerning
it
in
Middlemarch
,
where
she
was
spoken
of
to
a
younger
generation
as
a
fine
girl
who
married
a
sickly
clergyman
,
old
enough
to
be
her
father
,
and
in
little
more
than
a
year
after
his
death
gave
up
her
estate
to
marry
his
cousin
—
young
enough
to
have
been
his
son
,
with
no
property
,
and
not
well
-
born
.
Those
who
had
not
seen
anything
of
Dorothea
usually
observed
that
she
could
not
have
been
"
a
nice
woman
,
"
else
she
would
not
have
married
either
the
one
or
the
other
.
Certainly
those
determining
acts
of
her
life
were
not
ideally
beautiful
.
They
were
the
mixed
result
of
young
and
noble
impulse
struggling
amidst
the
conditions
of
an
imperfect
social
state
,
in
which
great
feelings
will
often
take
the
aspect
of
error
,
and
great
faith
the
aspect
of
illusion
.
For
there
is
no
creature
whose
inward
being
is
so
strong
that
it
is
not
greatly
determined
by
what
lies
outside
it
A
new
Theresa
will
hardly
have
the
opportunity
of
reforming
a
conventual
life
,
any
more
than
a
new
Antigone
will
spend
her
heroic
piety
in
daring
all
for
the
sake
of
a
brother
’
s
burial
:
the
medium
in
which
their
ardent
deeds
took
shape
is
forever
gone
.
But
we
insignificant
people
with
our
daily
words
and
acts
are
preparing
the
lives
of
many
Dorotheas
,
some
of
which
may
present
a
far
sadder
sacrifice
than
that
of
the
Dorothea
whose
story
we
know
.
Her
finely
touched
spirit
had
still
its
fine
issues
,
though
they
were
not
widely
visible
.
Her
full
nature
,
like
that
river
of
which
Cyrus
broke
the
strength
,
spent
itself
in
channels
which
had
no
great
name
on
the
earth
.
But
the
effect
of
her
being
on
those
around
her
was
incalculably
diffusive
:
for
the
growing
good
of
the
world
is
partly
dependent
on
unhistoric
acts
;
and
that
things
are
not
so
ill
with
you
and
me
as
they
might
have
been
,
is
half
owing
to
the
number
who
lived
faithfully
a
hidden
life
,
and
rest
in
unvisited
tombs
.