-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Фрэнсис Скотт Фицджеральд
-
- Ночь нежна
-
- Стр. 150/351
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
"
All
right
.
"
"
It
was
the
best
thing
that
could
have
happened
.
She
doesn
’
t
seem
over
-
agitated
—
only
a
little
in
the
clouds
.
"
"
All
right
,
then
.
"
"
Dick
,
come
soon
and
see
me
.
"
During
the
next
weeks
Dick
experienced
a
vast
dissatisfaction
.
The
pathological
origin
and
mechanistic
defeat
of
the
affair
left
a
flat
and
metallic
taste
.
Nicole
’
s
emotions
had
been
used
unfairly
—
what
if
they
turned
out
to
have
been
his
own
?
Necessarily
he
must
absent
himself
from
felicity
a
while
—
in
dreams
he
saw
her
walking
on
the
clinic
path
swinging
her
wide
straw
hat
.
.
.
.
One
time
he
saw
her
in
person
;
as
he
walked
past
the
Palace
Hotel
,
a
magnificent
Rolls
curved
into
the
half
-
moon
entrance
.
Small
within
its
gigantic
proportions
,
and
buoyed
up
by
the
power
of
a
hundred
superfluous
horses
,
sat
Nicole
and
a
young
woman
whom
he
assumed
was
her
sister
.
Nicole
saw
him
and
momentarily
her
lips
parted
in
an
expression
of
fright
.
Dick
shifted
his
hat
and
passed
,
yet
for
a
moment
the
air
around
him
was
loud
with
the
circlings
of
all
the
goblins
on
the
Gross
-
Münster
.
He
tried
to
write
the
matter
out
of
his
mind
in
a
memorandum
that
went
into
detail
as
to
the
solemn
régime
before
her
;
the
possibilities
of
another
"
push
"
of
the
malady
under
the
stresses
which
the
world
would
inevitably
supply
—
in
all
a
memorandum
that
would
have
been
convincing
to
any
one
save
to
him
who
had
written
it
.
The
total
value
of
this
effort
was
to
make
him
realize
once
more
how
far
his
emotions
were
involved
;
thenceforth
he
resolutely
provided
antidotes
.
One
was
the
telephone
girl
from
Bar
-
sur
-
Aube
,
now
touring
Europe
from
Nice
to
Coblenz
,
in
a
desperate
roundup
of
the
men
she
had
known
in
her
never
-
to
-
be
-
equalled
holiday
;
another
was
the
making
of
arrangements
to
get
home
on
a
government
transport
in
August
;
a
third
was
a
consequent
intensification
of
work
on
his
proofs
for
the
book
that
this
autumn
was
to
be
presented
to
the
German
-
speaking
world
of
psychiatry
.
Dick
had
outgrown
the
book
;
he
wanted
now
to
do
more
spade
work
;
if
he
got
an
exchange
fellowship
he
could
count
on
plenty
of
routine
.
Meanwhile
he
had
projected
a
new
work
:
An
Attempt
at
a
Uniform
and
Pragmatic
Classification
of
the
Neuroses
and
Psychoses
,
Based
on
an
Examination
of
Fifteen
Hundred
Pre
-
Krapælin
and
Post
-
Krapælin
Cases
as
they
would
be
Diagnosed
in
the
Terminology
of
the
Different
Contemporary
Schools
—
and
another
sonorous
paragraph
—
Together
with
a
Chronology
of
Such
Subdivisions
of
Opinion
as
Have
Arisen
Independently
.