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
971
"
That
is
a
subject
on
which
you
and
I
are
likely
to
take
quite
as
different
views
as
on
diet
,
Vincy
.
"
972
"
I
hope
not
this
time
.
"
(
Mr
.
Vincy
was
resolved
to
be
good
-
humored
.
)
"
The
fact
is
,
it
s
about
a
whim
of
old
Featherstone
s
.
Somebody
has
been
cooking
up
a
story
out
of
spite
,
and
telling
it
to
the
old
man
,
to
try
to
set
him
against
Fred
.
He
s
very
fond
of
Fred
,
and
is
likely
to
do
something
handsome
for
him
;
indeed
he
has
as
good
as
told
Fred
that
he
means
to
leave
him
his
land
,
and
that
makes
other
people
jealous
.
973
"
Отключить рекламу
974
"
Vincy
,
I
must
repeat
,
that
you
will
not
get
any
concurrence
from
me
as
to
the
course
you
have
pursued
with
your
eldest
son
.
It
was
entirely
from
worldly
vanity
that
you
destined
him
for
the
Church
:
with
a
family
of
three
sons
and
four
daughters
,
you
were
not
warranted
in
devoting
money
to
an
expensive
education
which
has
succeeded
in
nothing
but
in
giving
him
extravagant
idle
habits
.
You
are
now
reaping
the
consequences
.
"
975
To
point
out
other
people
s
errors
was
a
duty
that
Mr
.
Bulstrode
rarely
shrank
from
,
but
Mr
.
Vincy
was
not
equally
prepared
to
be
patient
.
When
a
man
has
the
immediate
prospect
of
being
mayor
,
and
is
ready
,
in
the
interests
of
commerce
,
to
take
up
a
firm
attitude
on
politics
generally
,
he
has
naturally
a
sense
of
his
importance
to
the
framework
of
things
which
seems
to
throw
questions
of
private
conduct
into
the
background
.
And
this
particular
reproof
irritated
him
more
than
any
other
.
It
was
eminently
superfluous
to
him
to
be
told
that
he
was
reaping
the
consequences
.
But
he
felt
his
neck
under
Bulstrode
s
yoke
;
and
though
he
usually
enjoyed
kicking
,
he
was
anxious
to
refrain
from
that
relief
.
976
"
As
to
that
,
Bulstrode
,
it
s
no
use
going
back
.
I
m
not
one
of
your
pattern
men
,
and
I
don
t
pretend
to
be
.
I
couldn
t
foresee
everything
in
the
trade
;
there
wasn
t
a
finer
business
in
Middlemarch
than
ours
,
and
the
lad
was
clever
.
977
My
poor
brother
was
in
the
Church
,
and
would
have
done
well
had
got
preferment
already
,
but
that
stomach
fever
took
him
off
:
else
he
might
have
been
a
dean
by
this
time
.
I
think
I
was
justified
in
what
I
tried
to
do
for
Fred
.
If
you
come
to
religion
,
it
seems
to
me
a
man
shouldn
t
want
to
carve
out
his
meat
to
an
ounce
beforehand
:
one
must
trust
a
little
to
Providence
and
be
generous
.
It
s
a
good
British
feeling
to
try
and
raise
your
family
a
little
:
in
my
opinion
,
it
s
a
father
s
duty
to
give
his
sons
a
fine
chance
.
"
Отключить рекламу
978
"
I
don
t
wish
to
act
otherwise
than
as
your
best
friend
,
Vincy
,
when
I
say
that
what
you
have
been
uttering
just
now
is
one
mass
of
worldliness
and
inconsistent
folly
.
"
979
"
Very
well
,
"
said
Mr
.
Vincy
,
kicking
in
spite
of
resolutions
,
"
I
never
professed
to
be
anything
but
worldly
;
and
,
what
s
more
,
I
don
t
see
anybody
else
who
is
not
worldly
.
I
suppose
you
don
t
conduct
business
on
what
you
call
unworldly
principles
.
The
only
difference
I
see
is
that
one
worldliness
is
a
little
bit
honester
than
another
.
"
980
"
This
kind
of
discussion
is
unfruitful
,
Vincy
,
"
said
Mr
.
Bulstrode
,
who
,
finishing
his
sandwich
,
had
thrown
himself
back
in
his
chair
,
and
shaded
his
eyes
as
if
weary
.
"
You
had
some
more
particular
business
.
"