Harris had pierced the front of Miss Snite to a certain extent that made her stick to her, for she understood the fierce, wild, hungry craving of the girl to be something, to be somebody, to lift herself out of the ruck of everyday struggle and acquire some of the good things of life for herself.
Prior to her own extraordinary craving which had brought her to Paris (до того, как ее собственное незаурядное страстное желание привело ее в Париж: to bring; prior — прежний, бывший; предшествующий; to crave — страстно желать, жаждать), Mrs. Harris had not experienced this in herself (миссис Харрис не замечала этого в себе) though she understood it very well (хотя понимала это очень хорошо). With her (с ней = в ее случае) it had not been so much the endeavor to make something of herself (это было не столько стремлением сделаться кем-либо) as it had been the battle to survive (как = сколько битвой за выживание), and in that sense these two were not unalike (и в этом смысле обе они были похожи: «эти две не были непохожи»).
extraordinary [Iks'trLdnrI], experienced [Iks'pIqrIqnst], endeavor [In'devq]
Prior to her own extraordinary craving which had brought her to Paris, Mrs. Harris had not experienced this in herself though she understood it very well. With her it had not been so much the endeavor to make something of herself as it had been the battle to survive, and in that sense these two were not unalike.
When Mrs. Harris' husband had died some twenty years past and left her penniless (когда муж миссис Харрис умер около двадцати лет назад и оставил ее без гроша: «без пенни»), she simply had to make a go of things (она просто должна была справиться с положением; to make a go of it — добиться успеха), her widow's pension being insufficient (/так как/ ее вдовьей пенсии было недостаточно).
And then too there was the glamour of the theater (а еще ведь было очарование театра; glamour — волшебство, чары; чарующая сила) which surrounded Miss Snite (которое окружало мисс Снайт), or rather Penrose, as Mrs. Harris chose to think of her, and this was irresistible (или, вернее, Пенроуз, как миссис Харрис предпочитала думать о ней, и это было неотразимо; to resist — сопротивляться).
husband ['hAzbqnd], glamour ['glxmq], irresistible ["IrI'zIstqbl]
When Mrs. Harris' husband had died some twenty years past and left her penniless, she simply had to make a go of things, her widow's pension being insufficient.
And then too there was the glamour of the theater which surrounded Miss Snite, or rather Penrose, as Mrs. Harris chose to think of her, and this was irresistible.
Mrs. Harris was not impressed by titles (миссис Харрис не впечатляли звания), wealth (богатство), position (положение), or family (или родство), but she was susceptible to the enchantment that enveloped anything or anyone that had to do with the stage (но она была чувствительна/восприимчива к очарованию, которое окружало все или всякого, кто имел дело со сценой), the television (телевидением), or the flicks (или кино).
She had no way of knowing how tenuous and sketchy was Miss Penrose's connection with these (у нее не было возможности знать = она не представляла, как незначительна и поверхностна была связь миссис Пенроуз с ними; tenuous — тонкий; незначительный, слабый, бедный, скудный), that she was not only a bad little girl but a mediocre actress (что она была не только плохой девчонкой, но и посредственной актрисой).
susceptible [sq'septqbl], tenuous ['tenjuqs], mediocre ['mJdIqukq]
Mrs. Harris was not impressed by titles, wealth, position, or family, but she was susceptible to the enchantment that enveloped anything or anyone that had to do with the stage, the television, or the flicks. |