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- Гюстав Флобер
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- Госпожа Бовари
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- Стр. 296/303
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Money
troubles
soon
began
again
,
Monsieur
Lheureux
urging
on
anew
his
friend
Vincart
,
and
Charles
pledged
himself
for
exorbitant
sums
;
for
he
would
never
consent
to
let
the
smallest
of
the
things
that
had
belonged
to
HER
be
sold
.
His
mother
was
exasperated
with
him
;
he
grew
even
more
angry
than
she
did
.
He
had
altogether
changed
.
She
left
the
house
.
Then
everyone
began
"
taking
advantage
"
of
him
.
Mademoiselle
Lempereur
presented
a
bill
for
six
months
'
teaching
,
although
Emma
had
never
taken
a
lesson
(
despite
the
receipted
bill
she
had
shown
Bovary
)
;
it
was
an
arrangement
between
the
two
women
.
The
man
at
the
circulating
library
demanded
three
years
'
subscriptions
;
Mere
Rollet
claimed
the
postage
due
for
some
twenty
letters
,
and
when
Charles
asked
for
an
explanation
,
she
had
the
delicacy
to
reply
--
"
Oh
,
I
do
n't
know
.
It
was
for
her
business
affairs
.
"
With
every
debt
he
paid
Charles
thought
he
had
come
to
the
end
of
them
.
But
others
followed
ceaselessly
.
He
sent
in
accounts
for
professional
attendance
.
He
was
shown
the
letters
his
wife
had
written
.
Then
he
had
to
apologise
.
Felicite
now
wore
Madame
Bovary
's
gowns
;
not
all
,
for
he
had
kept
some
of
them
,
and
he
went
to
look
at
them
in
her
dressing-room
,
locking
himself
up
there
;
she
was
about
her
height
,
and
often
Charles
,
seeing
her
from
behind
,
was
seized
with
an
illusion
,
and
cried
out
--
"
Oh
,
stay
,
stay
!
"
But
at
Whitsuntide
she
ran
away
from
Yonville
,
carried
off
by
Theodore
,
stealing
all
that
was
left
of
the
wardrobe
.
It
was
about
this
time
that
the
widow
Dupuis
had
the
honour
to
inform
him
of
the
"
marriage
of
Monsieur
Leon
Dupuis
her
son
,
notary
at
Yvetot
,
to
Mademoiselle
Leocadie
Leboeuf
of
Bondeville
.
"
Charles
,
among
the
other
congratulations
he
sent
him
,
wrote
this
sentence
--
"
How
glad
my
poor
wife
would
have
been
!
"
One
day
when
,
wandering
aimlessly
about
the
house
,
he
had
gone
up
to
the
attic
,
he
felt
a
pellet
of
fine
paper
under
his
slipper
.
He
opened
it
and
read
:
"
Courage
,
Emma
,
courage
.
I
would
not
bring
misery
into
your
life
.
"
It
was
Rodolphe
's
letter
,
fallen
to
the
ground
between
the
boxes
,
where
it
had
remained
,
and
that
the
wind
from
the
dormer
window
had
just
blown
towards
the
door
.
And
Charles
stood
,
motionless
and
staring
,
in
the
very
same
place
where
,
long
ago
,
Emma
,
in
despair
,
and
paler
even
than
he
,
had
thought
of
dying
.
At
last
he
discovered
a
small
R
at
the
bottom
of
the
second
page
.
What
did
this
mean
?
He
remembered
Rodolphe
's
attentions
,
his
sudden
,
disappearance
,
his
constrained
air
when
they
had
met
two
or
three
times
since
.
But
the
respectful
tone
of
the
letter
deceived
him
.