Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
O
!
said
Wildeve
.
Curse
me
!
The
die
smacked
the
stone
a
second
time
.
It
was
ace
again
.
Venn
looked
gloomy
,
threw
the
die
was
seen
to
be
lying
in
two
pieces
,
the
cleft
sides
uppermost
.
I
ve
thrown
nothing
at
all
,
he
said
.
Отключить рекламу
Serves
me
right
I
split
the
die
with
my
teeth
.
Here
take
your
money
.
Blank
is
less
than
one
.
I
don
t
wish
it
.
Take
it
,
I
say
you
ve
won
it
!
And
Wildeve
threw
the
stakes
against
the
reddleman
s
chest
.
Venn
gathered
them
up
,
arose
,
and
withdrew
from
the
hollow
,
Wildeve
sitting
stupefied
.
When
he
had
come
to
himself
he
also
arose
,
and
,
with
the
extinguished
lantern
in
his
hand
,
went
towards
the
highroad
.
On
reaching
it
he
stood
still
.
The
silence
of
night
pervaded
the
whole
heath
except
in
one
direction
;
and
that
was
towards
Mistover
.
There
he
could
hear
the
noise
of
light
wheels
,
and
presently
saw
two
carriagelamps
descending
the
hill
.
Wildeve
screened
himself
under
a
bush
and
waited
.
Отключить рекламу
The
vehicle
came
on
and
passed
before
him
.
It
was
a
hired
carriage
,
and
behind
the
coachman
were
two
persons
whom
he
knew
well
.
There
sat
Eustacia
and
Yeobright
,
the
arm
of
the
latter
being
round
her
waist
.
They
turned
the
sharp
corner
at
the
bottom
towards
the
temporary
home
which
Clym
had
hired
and
furnished
,
about
five
miles
to
the
eastward
.
Wildeve
forgot
the
loss
of
the
money
at
the
sight
of
his
lost
love
,
whose
preciousness
in
his
eyes
was
increasing
in
geometrical
progression
with
each
new
incident
that
reminded
him
of
their
hopeless
division
.
Brimming
with
the
subtilized
misery
that
he
was
capable
of
feeling
,
he
followed
the
opposite
way
towards
the
inn
.
About
the
same
moment
that
Wildeve
stepped
into
the
highway
Venn
also
had
reached
it
at
a
point
a
hundred
yards
further
on
;
and
he
,
hearing
the
same
wheels
,
likewise
waited
till
the
carriage
should
come
up
.
When
he
saw
who
sat
therein
he
seemed
to
be
disappointed
.
Reflecting
a
minute
or
two
,
during
which
interval
the
carriage
rolled
on
,
he
crossed
the
road
,
and
took
a
short
cut
through
the
furze
and
heath
to
a
point
where
the
turnpike
road
bent
round
in
ascending
a
hill
.
He
was
now
again
in
front
of
the
carriage
,
which
presently
came
up
at
a
walking
pace
.
Venn
stepped
forward
and
showed
himself
.