-
Главная
-
- Книги
-
- Авторы
-
- Жюль Верн
-
- Дети капитана Гранта
-
- Стр. 209/501
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
"
No
,
Monsieur
Paganel
.
"
"
Well
,
granting
that
,
what
became
of
him
?
The
suppositions
we
might
make
are
not
numerous
.
They
are
confined
to
three
.
Either
Harry
Grant
and
his
companions
have
found
their
way
to
the
English
colonies
,
or
they
have
fallen
into
the
hands
of
the
natives
,
or
they
are
lost
in
the
immense
wilds
of
Australia
.
"
"
Go
on
,
Paganel
,
"
said
Lord
Glenarvan
,
as
the
learned
Frenchman
made
a
pause
.
"
The
first
hypothesis
I
reject
,
then
,
to
begin
with
,
for
Harry
Grant
could
not
have
reached
the
English
colonies
,
or
long
ago
he
would
have
been
back
with
his
children
in
the
good
town
of
Dundee
.
"
"
Poor
father
,
"
murmured
Mary
,
"
away
from
us
for
two
whole
years
.
"
"
Hush
,
Mary
,
"
said
Robert
,
"
Monsieur
Paganel
will
tell
us
.
"
"
Alas
!
my
boy
,
I
can
not
.
All
that
I
affirm
is
,
that
Captain
Grant
is
in
the
hands
of
the
natives
.
"
"
But
these
natives
,
"
said
Lady
Helena
,
hastily
,
"
are
they
--
"
"
Reassure
yourself
,
madam
,
"
said
Paganel
,
divining
her
thoughts
.
"
The
aborigines
of
Australia
are
low
enough
in
the
scale
of
human
intelligence
,
and
most
degraded
and
uncivilized
,
but
they
are
mild
and
gentle
in
disposition
,
and
not
sanguinary
like
their
New
Zealand
neighbors
.
Though
they
may
be
prisoners
,
their
lives
have
never
been
threatened
,
you
may
be
sure
.
All
travelers
are
unanimous
in
declaring
that
the
Australian
natives
abhor
shedding
blood
,
and
many
a
time
they
have
found
in
them
faithful
allies
in
repelling
the
attacks
of
evil-disposed
convicts
far
more
cruelly
inclined
.
"