Английский язык с Грэмом Грином. Третий человек
Шрифт:
"You took her some money from Harry, didn't you (вы отнесли ей немного денег от Гарри, правда)?"
"Yes, but I wouldn't have mentioned that (да, но я бы не упоминал это). Did she tell you (/это/ она вам сказала)?"
The telephone went and Cooler drained his glass (зазвонил телефон, и Кулер осушил свой стакан). "Hullo," he said (алло, — сказал он). "Why, yes (ну да). This is Cooler (это Кулер)." Then he sat with the receiver at his ear (потом он сидел с трубкой у своего уха) and an expression of sad patience (и выражением печального терпения), while some voice a long way off drained into the room (пока какой-то голос издалека: «долгий путь прочь» просачивался в комнату). "Yes," he said once (он сказал один раз). "Yes." His eyes dwelt on Martins' face (его глаза задержались на лице Мартинса; to dwell — жить, обитать, находиться, пребывать; подробно останавливаться, задерживаться /на чем-л./), but they seemed to be looking a long way beyond him (но они, казалось, быть смотрели далеко за него = сквозь него): flat and tired and kind, they might have been gazing out over across the sea (тусклые,
He put the receiver down and passed a hand across his forehead wearily (он положил трубку и утомленно провел рукой по своему лбу). It was as though he were trying to remember something he had to do (это было, как будто он пытался вспомнить что-то, что он должен был сделать). Martins said, "Had you heard anything of this racket the police talk about (слышали вы что-либо об этой махинации, о которой говорят полицейские)?"
"I'm sorry (извините: «сожалею»). What's that (что это = о чем речь)?"
"They say Harry was mixed up in some racket (они говорят, что Гарри был замешан в каком-то мошенничестве)."
"Oh, no (о, нет)," Cooler said. "No. That's quite impossible (это совершенно невозможно). He had a great sense of duty (у него было большое чувство долга)."
"Kurtz seemed to think it was possible (Куртц, кажется, думает, что это было возможно)."
"Kurtz doesn't understand how an Anglo-Saxon feels (Куртц не понимает, как чувствует англосакс)," Cooler replied (ответил Кулер; to reply — отвечать, отзываться).
European ["juqrq'pi:qn], citizen ['sItIz(q)n], duty ['dju:tI], coincide ["kquIn'saId], disagree ["dIsq'gri:], difference ['dIf(q)r(q)ns], company ['kAmpqnI], confess [kqn'fes], humanity [hju:'mxnItI], touch [tAtS], asperity [xs'perItI], deliver [dI'lIvq], receiver [rI'si:vq]
"You'll never teach these Europeans to be good citizens. It was his duty." Cooler brooded sadly over his glass. "It's an odd thing, Mr. Martins, with accidents. You'll never get two reports that coincide. Why, even I and Mr. Kurtz disagreed about details. The thing happens so suddenly, you aren't concerned to notice things, until bang crash, and then you have to reconstruct, remember. I expect he got too tangled up trying to sort out what happened before and what after, to distinguish the four of us."
"The four?"
"I was counting Harry. What else did he see, Mr. Martins?"
"Nothing of interest—except he says Harry was dead when he was carried to the house."
"Well, he was dying—not much difference there. Have another drink, Mr. Martins?"
"No, I don't think I will."
"Well, I'd like another spot. I was very fond of your friend, Mr. Martins, and I don't like talking about it."
"Perhaps one more—to keep you company."
"Do you know Anna Schmidt?" Martins asked, while the whisky still tingled on his tongue.
"Harry's girl? I met her once, that's all. As a matter of fact, I helped Harry fix her papers. Not the sort of thing I should confess to a stranger, I suppose, but you have to break the rules sometimes. Humanity's a duty too."
"What was wrong?"
"She was Hungarian and her father had been a Nazi so they said. She was scared the Russians would pick her up."
"Why should they want to?"
"Well, her papers weren't in order."
"You took her some money from Harry, didn't you?"
"Yes, but I wouldn't have mentioned that. Did she tell you?"
The telephone went and Cooler drained his glass. "Hullo," he said. "Why, yes. This is Cooler." Then he sat with the receiver at his ear and an expression of sad patience, while some voice a long way off drained into the room. "Yes," he said once. "Yes." His eyes dwelt on Martins' face, but they seemed to be looking a long way beyond him: flat and tired and kind, they might have been gazing out over across the sea. He said, "You did quite right," in a tone of commendation, and then, with a touch of asperity, "Of course they will be delivered. I gave my word. Goodbye." He put the receiver down and passed a hand across his forehead wearily. It was as though he were trying to remember something he had to do. Martins said, "Had you heard anything of this racket the police talk about?"
"I'm sorry. What's that?"
"They say Harry was mixed up in some racket."
"Oh, no," Cooler said. "No. That's quite impossible. He had a great sense of duty."
"Kurtz seemed to think it was possible."
"Kurtz doesn't understand how an Anglo-Saxon feels," Cooler replied.
9
IT WAS NEARLY dark (было почти темно) when Martins made his way along the banks of the canal (когда Мартинс шел: «делал свой путь» вдоль берегов канала): across the water lay the half destroyed Diana baths (через воду лежали = на другой стороне канала находились наполовину
1
Пратер— знаменитый парк в Вене между Дунаем и Дунайским каналом, протяженность 5 км. Большую часть занимает т.н. "зелёный Пратер", где находится главная аллея, территория Венской международной ярмарки, ипподром, стадион, велодром, спортивные площадки. Впервые упоминается в 1162. Был излюбленным местом охоты императорской семьи. В 1766 открыт для посетителей [название от испанского prado — " луг"]
I asked him how he knew where she lived (я спросил его, как он узнал, где она жила). Oh, he said, he'd looked up the address she had given him the night before (что он посмотрел адрес, который она дала ему накануне вечером), in bed, studying a map (в кровати, изучая карту). He wanted to know his way about (он хотел знать свой путь/маршрут), and he was good with maps (и он был хорош с картами = легко умел разобраться в карте).
He could memorise turnings and street names easily because he always went one way on foot (он мог запоминать повороты и названия улиц легко, потому что он всегда шел в один конец пешком). "One way (в один конец)?"
"I mean when I'm calling on a girl—or someone (я имею в виду, когда я заглядываю к девушке — или кому-нибудь)."
He hadn't, of course, known that she would be in (он не знал, конечно, что она будет она дома), that her play was not on that night in the Josefstadt (что ее пьеса не игралась той ночью в Йозефштадте), or perhaps he had memorised that too from the posters (или, возможно, он запомнил это тоже из /ркламных/ плакатов). In at any rate she was (дома как бы то ни было: «по любой мере» она была), if you could really call it being in (если вы могли бы действительно назвать это быть дома), sitting alone in an unheated room (сидеть одной в нетопленной комнате), with the bed disguised as divan (с кроватью, замаскированной под тахту; as — как, в качестве), and the typewritten part (и /при том, что/ отпечатанная на машинке роль) lying open at the first page on the inadequate too fancy topply table (лежит, открытая на первой странице, на неподходящем, слишком вычурном, валком столике; fancy — причудливый, необычный, прихотливый, ср.: fancy dress — необычное платье; to topple — валиться, падать /головой вниз/; опрокидывать/ся/) because her thoughts were so far from being "in." (потому что ее мысли были так далеко от того, чтобы быть «внутри») He said awkwardly (он сказал неловко) (and nobody could have said, not even Rollo (и никто не мог бы сказать, даже сам Ролло), how much his awkwardness was part of his technique (насколько его неловкость была частью его техники): "I thought I'd just look in and look you up (я подумал, что я просто загляну и навещу тебя; to look up — навестить). You see, I was passing (видишь ли, я проходил мимо)..."