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- Теодор Драйзер
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- Американская трагедия
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- Стр. 462/598
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"
I
see
!
I
see
!
"
went
on
Jephson
,
oratorically
and
loudly
,
having
the
jury
and
audience
in
mind
.
"
A
case
of
the
Arabian
Nights
,
of
the
enscorcelled
and
the
enscorcellor
.
"
"
I
do
n't
think
I
know
what
you
mean
,
"
said
Clyde
.
"
A
case
of
being
betwitched
,
my
poor
boy
--
by
beauty
,
love
,
wealth
,
by
things
that
we
sometimes
think
we
want
very
,
very
much
,
and
can
not
ever
have
--
that
is
what
I
mean
,
and
that
is
what
much
of
the
love
in
the
world
amounts
to
.
"
"
Yes
,
sir
,
"
replied
Clyde
,
quite
innocently
,
concluding
rightly
that
this
was
mere
show
of
rhetoric
on
Jephson
's
part
.
"
But
what
I
want
to
know
is
--
how
was
it
that
loving
Miss
Alden
as
much
as
you
say
you
did
--
and
having
reached
that
relationship
which
should
have
been
sanctified
by
marriage
--
how
was
it
that
you
could
have
felt
so
little
bound
or
obligated
to
her
as
to
entertain
the
idea
of
casting
her
over
for
this
Miss
X
?
Now
just
how
was
that
?
I
would
like
to
know
,
and
so
would
this
jury
,
I
am
sure
.
Where
was
your
sense
of
gratitude
?
Your
sense
of
moral
obligation
?
Do
you
mean
to
say
that
you
have
none
?
We
want
to
know
.
"
This
was
really
cross-examination
--
an
attack
on
his
own
witness
.
Yet
Jephson
was
within
his
rights
and
Mason
did
not
interfere
.
"
Well
...
"
and
here
Clyde
hesitated
and
stumbled
,
quite
as
if
he
had
not
been
instructed
as
to
all
this
beforehand
,
and
seemed
to
and
did
truly
finger
about
in
his
own
mind
or
reason
for
some
thought
that
would
help
him
to
explain
all
this
.
For
although
it
was
true
that
he
had
memorized
the
answer
,
now
that
he
was
confronted
by
the
actual
question
here
in
court
,
as
well
as
the
old
problem
that
had
so
confused
and
troubled
him
in
Lycurgus
,
he
could
scarcely
think
clearly
of
all
he
had
been
told
to
say
,
but
instead
twisted
and
turned
,
and
finally
came
out
with
:
"
The
fact
is
,
I
did
n't
think
about
those
things
at
all
very
much
.
I
could
n't
after
I
saw
her
.
I
tried
to
at
times
,
but
I
could
n't
.
I
only
wanted
her
and
I
did
n't
want
Miss
Alden
any
more
.
I
knew
I
was
n't
doing
right
--
exactly
--
and
I
felt
sorry
for
Roberta
--
but
just
the
same
I
did
n't
seem
able
to
do
anything
much
about
it
.
I
could
only
think
of
Miss
X
and
I
could
n't
think
of
Roberta
as
I
had
before
no
matter
how
hard
I
tried
.
"
"
Do
you
mean
to
say
that
you
did
n't
suffer
in
your
own
conscience
on
account
of
this
?
"