"I have a few minutes to spare. I should be glad to." He sat down and lit the cigarette I offered him. He gave me a smiling look of his soft eyes. "Do you know, this is the first time I’ve ever been asked to sit down since I was sentenced." He inhaled a long whiff of his cigarette. "Egyptian. I haven’t smoked an Egyptian cigarette for three years."
The convicts make their own cigarettes out of a coarse, strong tobacco (заключенные делают свои /собственные/ сигареты из грубого, с резким /запахом/, табака;
"How does it taste (вам нравится;
"One gets accustomed to everything (ко всему можно привыкнуть) and, to tell you the truth, my palate is so vitiated (и, сказать вам по правде, вкус у меня настолько испорчен;
coarse [kO: s], square [skweq], palate ['pxlIt], vitiated ['vISIetId]
The convicts make their own cigarettes out of a coarse, strong tobacco that is sold in square blue packets. Since one is not allowed to pay them for the services they may render you, but may give them tobacco, I had bought a good many packets of this.
"How does it taste?"
"One gets accustomed to everything and, to tell you the truth, my palate is so vitiated, I prefer the stuff we get here."
"I’ll give you a couple of packets (я дам вам пару пачек)." I went into my room and fetched them (я пошел в свою комнату и принес их). When I returned he was looking at some books that were lying on the table (когда я вернулся, он смотрел на книги, которые лежали на столе).
"Are you fond of reading (вы любите читать)?" I asked.
"Very (очень). I think the want of books is what I most suffer from now (мне кажется, что больше всего сейчас я страдаю как раз из-за отсутствия книг). The few I can get hold of I’m forced to read over and over again (мне приходится перечитывать снова и снова те несколько /книжек/, которые мне удалось заполучить)."
To so great a reader as myself no deprivation seems more insupportable than the lack of books (для меня, как для страстного любителя чтения, никакое лишение не кажется более невыносимым, чем отсутствие книг;
lying ['laIIN], deprivation ["deprI'veIS(q)n], insupportable ["Insq'pO: tqb(q)l]
"I’ll give you a couple of packets." I went into my room and fetched them. When I returned he was looking at some books that were lying on the table.
"Are you fond of reading?" I asked. "Very. I think the want of books is what I most suffer from now. The few I can gel hold of I’m forced to read over and over again."
To so great a reader as myself no deprivation seems more insupportable than the lack of books.