), and for a mile on the other side of the rails (и на милю на другой стороне от рельсов) stretched the monumental masons (растянулись камещики
/лавки камещиков/, предлагающие памятники /для кладбища/: «монументальные каменщики) and the market gardeners (и садоводов;
market gardener — садовод или огородник, выращивающий для рынка)—an apparently endless chain of gravestones (по-видимому бесконечная цепь могильных камней) waiting for owners (ждущих владельцев) and wreaths waiting for mourners (и венков, ждущих плакальщиков;
to mourn — скорбеть, оплакивать).
wound /ранить/ [wu:nd], monumental ["mOnju'ment(q)l], wreath [ri:T], apparently [q'pxr(q)ntlI], mourner ['mO:nq]
It was only then, Martins told me, when the man used the word rabbit that the dead Harry Lime came alive, became the boy with the gun which he had shown Martins; a boy starting up among the long sandy barrows of Brickworth Common saying, "Shoot, you fool, shoot. There," and the rabbit limped to cover, wounded by Martins' shot. "Where are they burying him?" he asked the stranger on the landing.
"In the Central Cemetery. They’ll have a hard time of it in this frost."
He had no idea how to pay for his taxi, or indeed where in Vienna he could find a room in which he could live for five English pounds, but that problem had to be postponed until he had seen the last of Harry Lime. He drove straight out of town into the suburb (British zone) where the Central Cemetery lay. One passed through the Russian zone to reach it, and a short cut through the American zone, which you couldn't mistake because of the ice-cream parlours in every street. The trams ran along the high wall of the Central Cemetery, and for a mile on the other side of the rails stretched the monumental masons and the market gardeners—an apparently endless chain of gravestones waiting for owners and wreaths waiting for mourners.
Martins had not realised the size of this huge snowbound park (Мартинс /ранее/ не представлял себе размера этого гигантского, заметенного снегом парка; bound — несвободный, связанный; to bind — связывать) where he was making his last rendezvous with Lime (где он делал свое последнее свидание с Лаймом = где происходило егопоследнее свидание с Лаймом). It was as if Harry had left a message to him (это было похоже на то, как если бы Гарри оставил ему записку; to leave — оставлять), "Meet me in Hyde Park (встреть меня в Гайд-парке = жди меня в Гайд-парке)," without specifying a spot between the Achilles statue and Lancaster Gate (без определения места =