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181
"
Tut-tut
,
"
said
Mr.
Utterson
;
and
then
after
a
considerable
pause
,
"
Ca
n't
I
do
anything
?
"
he
inquired
.
"
We
are
three
very
old
friends
,
Lanyon
;
we
shall
not
live
to
make
others
.
"
182
"
Nothing
can
be
done
,
"
returned
Lanyon
;
"
ask
himself
.
"
183
"
He
will
not
see
me
,
"
said
the
lawyer
.
Отключить рекламу
184
"
I
am
not
surprised
at
that
,
"
was
the
reply
.
"
Some
day
,
Utterson
,
after
I
am
dead
,
you
may
perhaps
come
to
learn
the
right
and
wrong
of
this
.
I
can
not
tell
you
.
And
in
the
meantime
,
if
you
can
sit
and
talk
with
me
of
other
things
,
for
God
's
sake
,
stay
and
do
so
;
but
if
you
can
not
keep
clear
of
this
accursed
topic
,
then
,
in
God
's
name
,
go
,
for
I
can
not
bear
it
.
"
185
As
soon
as
he
got
home
,
Utterson
sat
down
and
wrote
to
Jekyll
,
complaining
of
his
exclusion
from
the
house
,
and
asking
the
cause
of
this
unhappy
break
with
Lanyon
;
and
the
next
day
brought
him
a
long
answer
,
often
very
pathetically
worded
,
and
sometimes
darkly
mysterious
in
drift
.
The
quarrel
with
Lanyon
was
incurable
.
"
I
do
not
blame
our
old
friend
,
"
Jekyll
wrote
,
"
but
I
share
his
view
that
we
must
never
meet
.
186
I
mean
from
henceforth
to
lead
a
life
of
extreme
seclusion
;
you
must
not
be
surprised
,
nor
must
you
doubt
my
friendship
,
if
my
door
is
often
shut
even
to
you
.
You
must
suffer
me
to
go
my
own
dark
way
.
I
have
brought
on
myself
a
punishment
and
a
danger
that
I
can
not
name
.
If
I
am
the
chief
of
sinners
,
I
am
the
chief
of
sufferers
also
.
I
could
not
think
that
this
earth
contained
a
place
for
sufferings
and
terrors
so
unmanning
;
and
you
can
do
but
one
thing
,
Utterson
,
to
lighten
this
destiny
,
and
that
is
to
respect
my
silence
.
"
Utterson
was
amazed
;
the
dark
influence
of
Hyde
had
been
withdrawn
,
the
doctor
had
returned
to
his
old
tasks
and
amities
;
a
week
ago
,
the
prospect
had
smiled
with
every
promise
of
a
cheerful
and
an
honoured
age
;
and
now
in
a
moment
,
friendship
,
and
peace
of
mind
,
and
the
whole
tenor
of
his
life
were
wrecked
.
So
great
and
unprepared
a
change
pointed
to
madness
;
but
in
view
of
Lanyon
's
manner
and
words
,
there
must
lie
for
it
some
deeper
ground
.
187
A
week
afterwards
Dr.
Lanyon
took
to
his
bed
,
and
in
something
less
than
a
fortnight
he
was
dead
.
The
night
after
the
funeral
,
at
which
he
had
been
sadly
affected
,
Utterson
locked
the
door
of
his
business
room
,
and
sitting
there
by
the
light
of
a
melancholy
candle
,
drew
out
and
set
before
him
an
envelope
addressed
by
the
hand
and
sealed
with
the
seal
of
his
dead
friend
.
"
Private
:
for
the
hands
of
G.
J.
Utterson
alone
and
in
case
of
his
predecease
to
be
destroyed
unread
,
"
so
it
was
emphatically
superscribed
;
and
the
lawyer
dreaded
to
behold
the
contents
.
Отключить рекламу
188
"
I
have
buried
one
friend
to-day
,
"
he
thought
:
"
what
if
this
should
cost
me
another
?
"
And
then
he
condemned
the
fear
as
a
disloyalty
,
and
broke
the
seal
.
Within
there
was
another
enclosure
,
likewise
sealed
,
and
marked
upon
the
cover
as
"
not
to
be
opened
till
the
death
or
disappearance
of
Dr.
Henry
Jekyll
.
"
Utterson
could
not
trust
his
eyes
.
Yes
,
it
was
disappearance
;
here
again
,
as
in
the
mad
will
which
he
had
long
ago
restored
to
its
author
,
here
again
were
the
idea
of
a
disappearance
and
the
name
of
Henry
Jekyll
bracketed
.
But
in
the
will
,
that
idea
had
sprung
from
the
sinister
suggestion
of
the
man
Hyde
;
it
was
set
there
with
a
purpose
all
too
plain
and
horrible
.
Written
by
the
hand
of
Lanyon
,
what
should
it
mean
?
A
great
curiosity
came
on
the
trustee
,
to
disregard
the
prohibition
and
dive
at
once
to
the
bottom
of
these
mysteries
;
but
professional
honour
and
faith
to
his
dead
friend
were
stringent
obligations
;
and
the
packet
slept
in
the
inmost
corner
of
his
private
safe
.
189
It
is
one
thing
to
mortify
curiosity
,
another
to
conquer
it
;
and
it
may
be
doubted
if
,
from
that
day
forth
,
Utterson
desired
the
society
of
his
surviving
friend
with
the
same
eagerness
.
He
thought
of
him
kindly
;
but
his
thoughts
were
disquieted
and
fearful
.
190
He
went
to
call
indeed
;
but
he
was
perhaps
relieved
to
be
denied
admittance
;
perhaps
,
in
his
heart
,
he
preferred
to
speak
with
Poole
upon
the
doorstep
and
surrounded
by
the
air
and
sounds
of
the
open
city
,
rather
than
to
be
admitted
into
that
house
of
voluntary
bondage
,
and
to
sit
and
speak
with
its
inscrutable
recluse
.
Poole
had
,
indeed
,
no
very
pleasant
news
to
communicate
.
The
doctor
,
it
appeared
,
now
more
than
ever
confined
himself
to
the
cabinet
over
the
laboratory
,
where
he
would
sometimes
even
sleep
;
he
was
out
of
spirits
,
he
had
grown
very
silent
,
he
did
not
read
;
it
seemed
as
if
he
had
something
on
his
mind
.
Utterson
became
so
used
to
the
unvarying
character
of
these
reports
,
that
he
fell
off
little
by
little
in
the
frequency
of
his
visits
.