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171
"
I
would
n't
speak
of
this
note
,
you
know
,
"
said
the
master
.
172
"
No
,
sir
,
"
said
the
clerk
.
"
I
understand
.
"
173
But
no
sooner
was
Mr.
Utterson
alone
that
night
than
he
locked
the
note
into
his
safe
,
where
it
reposed
from
that
time
forward
.
"
What
!
"
he
thought
.
"
Henry
Jekyll
forge
for
a
murderer
!
"
And
his
blood
ran
cold
in
his
veins
.
Отключить рекламу
174
Time
ran
on
;
thousands
of
pounds
were
offered
in
reward
,
for
the
death
of
Sir
Danvers
was
resented
as
a
public
injury
;
but
Mr.
Hyde
had
disappeared
out
of
the
ken
of
the
police
as
though
he
had
never
existed
.
Much
of
his
past
was
unearthed
,
indeed
,
and
all
disreputable
:
tales
came
out
of
the
man
's
cruelty
,
at
once
so
callous
and
violent
;
of
his
vile
life
,
of
his
strange
associates
,
of
the
hatred
that
seemed
to
have
surrounded
his
career
;
but
of
his
present
whereabouts
,
not
a
whisper
.
From
the
time
he
had
left
the
house
in
Soho
on
the
morning
of
the
murder
,
he
was
simply
blotted
out
;
and
gradually
,
as
time
drew
on
,
Mr.
Utterson
began
to
recover
from
the
hotness
of
his
alarm
,
and
to
grow
more
at
quiet
with
himself
.
The
death
of
Sir
Danvers
was
,
to
his
way
of
thinking
,
more
than
paid
for
by
the
disappearance
of
Mr.
Hyde
.
Now
that
that
evil
influence
had
been
withdrawn
,
a
new
life
began
for
Dr.
Jekyll
.
He
came
out
of
his
seclusion
,
renewed
relations
with
his
friends
,
became
once
more
their
familiar
guest
and
entertainer
;
and
whilst
he
had
always
been
,
known
for
charities
,
he
was
now
no
less
distinguished
for
religion
.
He
was
busy
,
he
was
much
in
the
open
air
,
he
did
good
;
his
face
seemed
to
open
and
brighten
,
as
if
with
an
inward
consciousness
of
service
;
and
for
more
than
two
months
,
the
doctor
was
at
peace
.
175
On
the
8th
of
January
Utterson
had
dined
at
the
doctor
's
with
a
small
party
;
Lanyon
had
been
there
;
and
the
face
of
the
host
had
looked
from
one
to
the
other
as
in
the
old
days
when
the
trio
were
inseparable
friends
.
176
On
the
12th
,
and
again
on
the
14th
,
the
door
was
shut
against
the
lawyer
.
"
The
doctor
was
confined
to
the
house
,
"
Poole
said
,
"
and
saw
no
one
.
"
On
the
15th
,
he
tried
again
,
and
was
again
refused
;
and
having
now
been
used
for
the
last
two
months
to
see
his
friend
almost
daily
,
he
found
this
return
of
solitude
to
weigh
upon
his
spirits
.
The
fifth
night
he
had
in
Guest
to
dine
with
him
;
and
the
sixth
he
betook
himself
to
Dr.
Lanyon
's
.
177
There
at
least
he
was
not
denied
admittance
;
but
when
he
came
in
,
he
was
shocked
at
the
change
which
had
taken
place
in
the
doctor
's
appearance
.
He
had
his
death-warrant
written
legibly
upon
his
face
.
The
rosy
man
had
grown
pale
;
his
flesh
had
fallen
away
;
he
was
visibly
balder
and
older
;
and
yet
it
was
not
so
much
,
these
tokens
of
a
swift
physical
decay
that
arrested
the
lawyer
's
notice
,
as
a
look
in
the
eye
and
quality
of
manner
that
seemed
to
testify
to
some
deep-seated
terror
of
the
mind
.
It
was
unlikely
that
the
doctor
should
fear
death
;
and
yet
that
was
what
Utterson
was
tempted
to
suspect
.
"
Yes
,
"
he
thought
;
"
he
is
a
doctor
,
he
must
know
his
own
state
and
that
his
days
are
counted
;
and
the
knowledge
is
more
than
he
can
bear
.
"
And
yet
when
Utterson
remarked
on
his
ill-looks
,
it
was
with
an
air
of
greatness
that
Lanyon
declared
himself
a
doomed
man
.
Отключить рекламу
178
"
I
have
had
a
shock
,
"
he
said
,
"
and
I
shall
never
recover
.
It
is
a
question
of
weeks
.
Well
,
life
has
been
pleasant
;
I
liked
it
;
yes
,
sir
,
I
used
to
like
it
.
I
sometimes
think
if
we
knew
all
,
we
should
be
more
glad
to
get
away
.
"
179
"
Jekyll
is
ill
,
too
,
"
observed
Utterson
.
"
Have
you
seen
him
?
"
180
But
Lanyon
's
face
changed
,
and
he
held
up
a
trembling
hand
.
"
I
wish
to
see
or
hear
no
more
of
Dr.
Jekyll
,
"
he
said
in
a
loud
,
unsteady
voice
.
"
I
am
quite
done
with
that
person
;
and
I
beg
that
you
will
spare
me
any
allusion
to
one
whom
I
regard
as
dead
.
"