приобретение;
in them of humility (в них — от смиренности). In both cases it brought one
precious thing (в обоих случаях она приносила одну /и ту же/ драгоценность:
«драгоценное явление»), liberty of spirit (свободу духа); but with them it was
more secure (но у них она была более надежной;
routine [ru:'ti:n] existence [Ig'zIst(q)ns] footlights ['fVtlaIts] precious ['preSqs]
The peaceful habits of the two old ladies, the routine of their uneventful existence
and their quiet gossip, excited her compassion. Nothing had happened to them for
years, nothing now would ever happen to them till they died, and then how little
would their lives have signified. The strange thing was that they were content.
They knew neither malice nor envy. They had achieved the aloofness from the
common ties of men that Julia felt in herself when she stood at the footlights
bowing to the applause of an enthusiastic audience. Sometimes she had thought
that aloofness her most precious possession. In her it was born of pride; in them of
675
humility. In both cases it brought one precious thing, liberty of spirit; but with
them it was more secure.
Michael wrote to her once a week (Майкл писал ей раз в неделю), brisk,
businesslike letters (живые, деловые письма) in which he told her what her
takings were at the Siddons (в которых он рассказывал ей, какая была /ее/
выручка в «Сиддонс-театре») and the preparations he was making for the next
production (и о тех приготовлениях, что он делал для следующей
постановки); but Charles Tamerley wrote to her every day (но Чарльз Тэмерли
писали ей каждый день). He told her the gossip of the town (он рассказывал ей
всю светскую хронику: «все сплетни» города), he talked in his charming,
cultivated way of the pictures he saw and the books he read (он рассказывал в
своей очаровательной, образованной манере о картинах, которые он видел и
о книгах, которые он прочитал). He was tenderly allusive and playfully erudite
(он был нежно символичен и игриво эрудирован;
pedantry (он философствовал без педантичности). He told her that he adored
her (он говорил ей, что он преклоняется перед ней: «обожает ее»). They were
the most beautiful love-letters Julia had ever received (это были: «они были»
самые красивые любовные письма, которое Джулия когда-либо получала)
and for the sake of posterity (и, ради последующий поколений: «потомства»)
she made up her mind to keep them (она решила сохранить их). One day perhaps
someone would publish them (однажды, может случится так: «может быть»,
что кто-нибудь опубликует их) and people would go to the National Portrait
Gallery and look at her portrait (и люди пойдут в Национальную портретную
галерею и посмотрят на ее портрет), the one McEvoy had painted (тот самый,
что Мак-Эвой нарисовал), and sigh when they thought of the sad, romantic love-
story of which she had been the heroine (и вздохнут, когда они подумают о той
печальной, романтической истории любви, в которой она была главным
действующим лицом: «героиней»).
676
preparation ["prepq'reIS(q)n] cultivated ['kAltIveItId] philosophize [fI'lOsqfaIz]
Michael wrote to her once a week, brisk, businesslike letters in which he told her
what her takings were at the Siddons and the preparations he was making for the
next production; but Charles Tamerley wrote to her every day. He told her the
gossip of the town, he talked in his charming, cultivated way of the pictures he saw
and the books he read. He was tenderly allusive and playfully erudite. He
philosophized without pedantry. He told her that he adored her. They were the
most beautiful love-letters Julia had ever received and for the sake of posterity she
made up her mind to keep them. One day perhaps someone would publish them
and people would go to the National Portrait Gallery and look at her portrait, the
one McEvoy had painted, and sigh when they thought of the sad, romantic love-
story of which she had been the heroine.
Charles had been wonderful to her during the first two weeks of her bereavement
(Чарльз был удивительным /по отношению/ к ней во время первых двух
недель с момента ее ужасной потери), she did not know what she would have
done without him (она не знала, что бы она делала без него). He had always
been at her beck and call (он всегда был всецело в ее распоряжении;