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31
"
Tell
me
,
for
Heaven
's
sake
,
"
I
exclaimed
,
"
the
method
--
if
method
there
is
--
by
which
you
have
been
enabled
to
fathom
my
soul
in
this
matter
.
"
In
fact
I
was
even
more
startled
than
I
would
have
been
willing
to
express
.
32
"
It
was
the
fruiterer
,
"
replied
my
friend
,
"
who
brought
you
to
the
conclusion
that
the
mender
of
soles
was
not
of
sufficient
height
for
Xerxes
et
id
genus
omne
.
"
33
"
The
fruiterer
!
--
you
astonish
me
--
I
know
no
fruiterer
whomsoever
.
"
Отключить рекламу
34
"
The
man
who
ran
up
against
you
as
we
entered
the
street
--
it
may
have
been
fifteen
minutes
ago
.
"
35
I
now
remembered
that
,
in
fact
,
a
fruiterer
,
carrying
upon
his
head
a
large
basket
of
apples
,
had
nearly
thrown
me
down
,
by
accident
,
as
we
passed
from
the
Rue
C
--
into
the
thoroughfare
where
we
stood
;
but
what
this
had
to
do
with
Chantilly
I
could
not
possibly
understand
.
36
There
was
not
a
particle
of
charlatanerie
about
Dupin
.
"
I
will
explain
,
"
he
said
,
"
and
that
you
may
comprehend
all
clearly
,
we
will
explain
,
"
he
said
,
"
and
that
you
may
comprehend
all
clearly
,
we
will
first
retrace
the
course
of
your
meditations
,
from
the
moment
in
which
I
spoke
to
you
until
that
of
the
rencontre
with
the
fruiterer
in
question
.
The
larger
links
of
the
chain
run
thus
--
Chantilly
,
Orion
,
Dr.
37
Nichols
,
Epicurus
,
Stereotomy
,
the
street
stones
,
the
fruiterer
.
"
Отключить рекламу
38
There
are
few
persons
who
have
not
,
at
some
period
of
their
lives
,
amused
themselves
in
retracing
the
steps
by
which
particular
conclusions
of
their
own
minds
have
been
attained
.
The
occupation
is
often
full
of
interest
;
and
he
who
attempts
it
for
the
first
time
is
astonished
by
the
apparently
illimitable
distance
and
incoherence
between
the
starting-point
and
the
goal
.
What
,
then
,
must
have
been
my
amazement
when
I
heard
the
Frenchman
speak
what
he
had
just
spoken
,
and
when
I
could
not
help
acknowledging
that
he
had
spoken
the
truth
.
He
continued
:
39
"
We
had
been
talking
of
horses
,
if
I
remember
aright
,
just
before
leaving
the
Rue
C
--
.
This
was
the
last
subject
we
discussed
.
As
we
crossed
into
this
street
,
a
fruiterer
,
with
a
large
basket
upon
his
head
,
brushing
quickly
past
us
,
thrust
you
upon
a
pile
of
paving-stones
collected
at
a
spot
where
the
causeway
is
undergoing
repair
.
You
stepped
upon
one
of
the
loose
fragments
)
slipped
,
slightly
strained
your
ankle
,
appeared
vexed
or
sulky
,
muttered
a
few
words
,
turned
to
look
at
the
pile
,
and
then
proceeded
in
silence
.
I
was
not
particularly
attentive
to
what
you
did
;
but
observation
has
become
with
me
,
of
late
,
a
species
of
necessity
.
40
"
You
kept
your
eyes
upon
the
ground
--
glancing
,
with
a
petulant
expression
,
at
the
holes
and
ruts
in
the
pavement
,
(
so
that
I
saw
you
were
still
thinking
of
the
stones
,
)
until
we
reached
the
little
alley
called
Lamartine
,
which
has
been
paved
,
by
way
of
experiment
,
with
the
overlapping
and
riveted
blocks
.
Here
your
countenance
brightened
up
,
and
,
perceiving
your
lips
move
,
I
could
not
doubt
that
you
murmured
the
word
'
stereotomy
,
'
a
term
very
affectedly
applied
to
this
species
of
pavement
.
I
knew
that
you
could
not
say
to
yourself
'
stereotomy
'
without
being
brought
to
think
of
atomies
,
and
thus
of
the
theories
of
Epicurus
;
and
since
,
when
we
discussed
this
subject
not
very
long
ago
,
I
mentioned
to
you
how
singularly
,
yet
with
how
little
notice
,
the
vague
guesses
of
that
noble
Greek
had
met
with
confirmation
in
the
late
nebular
cosmogony
,
I
felt
that
you
could
not
avoid
casting
your
eyes
upward
to
the
great
nebula
in
Orion
,
and
I
certainly
expected
that
you
would
do
so
.
You
did
look
up
;
and
I
was
now
assured
that
I
had
correctly
followed
your
steps
.
But
in
that
bitter
tirade
upon
Chantilly
,
which
appeared
in
yesterday
's
'
Musee
,
'
the
satirist
,
making
some
disgraceful
allusions
to
the
cobbler
's
change
of
name
upon
assuming
the
buskin
,
quoted
a
Latin
line
about
which
we
have
often
conversed
.
I
mean
the
line