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Главная
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- Авторы
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- Эдгар Райс Берроуз
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- Тарзан, приёмыш обезьян
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- Стр. 86/280
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Tarzan
led
them
by
night
to
the
fields
of
the
black
men
,
and
there
,
warned
by
their
chief
's
superior
wisdom
,
they
ate
only
what
they
required
,
nor
ever
did
they
destroy
what
they
could
not
eat
,
as
is
the
way
of
Manu
,
the
monkey
,
and
of
most
apes
.
So
,
while
the
blacks
were
wroth
at
the
continued
pilfering
of
their
fields
,
they
were
not
discouraged
in
their
efforts
to
cultivate
the
land
,
as
would
have
been
the
case
had
Tarzan
permitted
his
people
to
lay
waste
the
plantation
wantonly
.
During
this
period
Tarzan
paid
many
nocturnal
visits
to
the
village
,
where
he
often
renewed
his
supply
of
arrows
.
He
soon
noticed
the
food
always
standing
at
the
foot
of
the
tree
which
was
his
avenue
into
the
palisade
,
and
after
a
little
,
he
commenced
to
eat
whatever
the
blacks
put
there
.
When
the
awe-struck
savages
saw
that
the
food
disappeared
overnight
they
were
filled
with
consternation
and
dread
,
for
it
was
one
thing
to
put
food
out
to
propitiate
a
god
or
a
devil
,
but
quite
another
thing
to
have
the
spirit
really
come
into
the
village
and
eat
it
.
Such
a
thing
was
unheard
of
,
and
it
clouded
their
superstitious
minds
with
all
manner
of
vague
fears
.
Nor
was
this
all
.
The
periodic
disappearance
of
their
arrows
,
and
the
strange
pranks
perpetrated
by
unseen
hands
,
had
wrought
them
to
such
a
state
that
life
had
become
a
veritable
burden
in
their
new
home
,
and
now
it
was
that
Mbonga
and
his
head
men
began
to
talk
of
abandoning
the
village
and
seeking
a
site
farther
on
in
the
jungle
.
Presently
the
black
warriors
began
to
strike
farther
and
farther
south
into
the
heart
of
the
forest
when
they
went
to
hunt
,
looking
for
a
site
for
a
new
village
.
More
often
was
the
tribe
of
Tarzan
disturbed
by
these
wandering
huntsmen
.
Now
was
the
quiet
,
fierce
solitude
of
the
primeval
forest
broken
by
new
,
strange
cries
.
No
longer
was
there
safety
for
bird
or
beast
.
Man
had
come
.
Other
animals
passed
up
and
down
the
jungle
by
day
and
by
night
--
fierce
,
cruel
beasts
--
but
their
weaker
neighbors
only
fled
from
their
immediate
vicinity
to
return
again
when
the
danger
was
past
.
With
man
it
is
different
.
When
he
comes
many
of
the
larger
animals
instinctively
leave
the
district
entirely
,
seldom
if
ever
to
return
;
and
thus
it
has
always
been
with
the
great
anthropoids
.
They
flee
man
as
man
flees
a
pestilence
.