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- Стр. 26/431
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With
fainting
heart
and
weary
limb
;
Kind
voices
bade
him
turn
and
rest
,
And
gentle
faces
welcomed
him
.
The
dawn
is
up
--
the
guest
is
gone
,
The
cottage
hearth
is
blazing
still
;
Heaven
pity
all
poor
wanderers
lone
!
Hark
to
the
wind
upon
the
hill
!
It
was
the
sentiment
of
the
before-mentioned
words
,
"
When
I
'm
gone
,
"
over
again
.
As
she
came
to
the
last
words
,
Miss
Sharp
's
"
deep-toned
voice
faltered
.
"
Everybody
felt
the
allusion
to
her
departure
,
and
to
her
hapless
orphan
state
.
Joseph
Sedley
,
who
was
fond
of
music
,
and
soft-hearted
,
was
in
a
state
of
ravishment
during
the
performance
of
the
song
,
and
profoundly
touched
at
its
conclusion
.
If
he
had
had
the
courage
;
if
George
and
Miss
Sedley
had
remained
,
according
to
the
former
's
proposal
,
in
the
farther
room
,
Joseph
Sedley
's
bachelorhood
would
have
been
at
an
end
,
and
this
work
would
never
have
been
written
.
But
at
the
close
of
the
ditty
,
Rebecca
quitted
the
piano
,
and
giving
her
hand
to
Amelia
,
walked
away
into
the
front
drawing-room
twilight
;
and
,
at
this
moment
,
Mr.
Sambo
made
his
appearance
with
a
tray
,
containing
sandwiches
,
jellies
,
and
some
glittering
glasses
and
decanters
,
on
which
Joseph
Sedley
's
attention
was
immediately
fixed
.
When
the
parents
of
the
house
of
Sedley
returned
from
their
dinner-party
,
they
found
the
young
people
so
busy
in
talking
,
that
they
had
not
heard
the
arrival
of
the
carriage
,
and
Mr.
Joseph
was
in
the
act
of
saying
,
"
My
dear
Miss
Sharp
,
one
little
teaspoonful
of
jelly
to
recruit
you
after
your
immense
--
your
--
your
delightful
exertions
.
"
"
Bravo
,
Jos
!
"
said
Mr.
Sedley
;
on
hearing
the
bantering
of
which
well-known
voice
,
Jos
instantly
relapsed
into
an
alarmed
silence
,
and
quickly
took
his
departure
.
He
did
not
lie
awake
all
night
thinking
whether
or
not
he
was
in
love
with
Miss
Sharp
;
the
passion
of
love
never
interfered
with
the
appetite
or
the
slumber
of
Mr.
Joseph
Sedley
;
but
he
thought
to
himself
how
delightful
it
would
be
to
hear
such
songs
as
those
after
Cutcherry
--
what
a
distinguee
girl
she
was
--
how
she
could
speak
French
better
than
the
Governor-General
's
lady
herself
--
and
what
a
sensation
she
would
make
at
the
Calcutta
balls
.