-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Томас Харди
-
- Тэсс из рода д’Эрбервиллей
-
- Стр. 150/360
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
A
life
that
leads
melodious
days
.
He
had
occasionally
thought
the
counsel
less
honest
than
musical
;
but
he
gladly
conformed
to
it
now
.
He
spoke
further
of
the
incidents
of
his
visit
,
of
his
father
’
s
mode
of
life
,
of
his
zeal
for
his
principles
;
she
grew
serener
,
and
the
undulations
disappeared
from
her
skimming
;
as
she
finished
one
lead
after
another
he
followed
her
,
and
drew
the
plugs
for
letting
down
the
milk
.
“
I
fancied
you
looked
a
little
downcast
when
you
came
in
,
”
she
ventured
to
observe
,
anxious
to
keep
away
from
the
subject
of
herself
.
“
Yes
—
well
,
my
father
had
been
talking
a
good
deal
to
me
of
his
troubles
and
difficulties
,
and
the
subject
always
tends
to
depress
me
.
He
is
so
zealous
that
he
gets
many
snubs
and
buffetings
from
people
of
a
different
way
of
thinking
from
himself
,
and
I
don
’
t
like
to
hear
of
such
humiliations
to
a
man
of
his
age
,
the
more
particularly
as
I
don
’
t
think
earnestness
does
any
good
when
carried
so
far
.
He
has
been
telling
me
of
a
very
unpleasant
scene
in
which
he
took
part
quite
recently
.
He
went
as
the
deputy
of
some
missionary
society
to
preach
in
the
neighbourhood
of
Trantridge
,
a
place
forty
miles
from
here
,
and
made
it
his
business
to
expostulate
with
a
lax
young
cynic
he
met
with
somewhere
about
there
—
son
of
some
landowner
up
that
way
—
and
who
has
a
mother
afflicted
with
blindness
.
My
father
addressed
himself
to
the
gentleman
point
-
blank
,
and
there
was
quite
a
disturbance
.
It
was
very
foolish
of
my
father
,
I
must
say
,
to
intrude
his
conversation
upon
a
stranger
when
the
probabilities
were
so
obvious
that
it
would
be
useless
.
But
whatever
he
thinks
to
be
his
duty
,
that
he
’
ll
do
,
in
season
or
out
of
season
;
and
,
of
course
,
he
makes
many
enemies
,
not
only
among
the
absolutely
vicious
,
but
among
the
easy
-
going
,
who
hate
being
bothered
.
He
says
he
glories
in
what
happened
,
and
that
good
may
be
done
indirectly
;
but
I
wish
he
would
not
wear
himself
out
now
he
is
getting
old
,
and
would
leave
such
pigs
to
their
wallowing
.
”
Tess
’
s
look
had
grown
hard
and
worn
,
and
her
ripe
mouth
tragical
;
but
she
no
longer
showed
any
tremulousness
.
Clare
’
s
revived
thoughts
of
his
father
prevented
his
noticing
her
particularly
;
and
so
they
went
on
down
the
white
row
of
liquid
rectangles
till
they
had
finished
and
drained
them
off
,
when
the
other
maids
returned
,
and
took
their
pails
,
and
Deb
came
to
scald
out
the
leads
for
the
new
milk
As
Tess
withdrew
to
go
afield
to
the
cows
he
said
to
her
softly
—
“
And
my
question
,
Tessy
?
”
“
O
no
—
no
!
”
replied
she
with
grave
hopelessness
,
as
one
who
had
heard
anew
the
turmoil
of
her
own
past
in
the
allusion
to
Alec
d
’
Urberville
.
“
It
CAN
’
T
be
!
”