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- Эдгар Райс Берроуз
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To
this
end
,
therefore
,
he
collected
the
various
arm
and
leg
ornaments
he
had
taken
from
the
black
warriors
who
had
succumbed
to
his
swift
and
silent
noose
,
and
donned
them
all
after
the
way
he
had
seen
them
worn
.
About
his
neck
hung
the
golden
chain
from
which
depended
the
diamond
encrusted
locket
of
his
mother
,
the
Lady
Alice
.
At
his
back
was
a
quiver
of
arrows
slung
from
a
leathern
shoulder
belt
,
another
piece
of
loot
from
some
vanquished
black
.
About
his
waist
was
a
belt
of
tiny
strips
of
rawhide
fashioned
by
himself
as
a
support
for
the
home-made
scabbard
in
which
hung
his
father
's
hunting
knife
.
The
long
bow
which
had
been
Kulonga
's
hung
over
his
left
shoulder
.
The
young
Lord
Greystoke
was
indeed
a
strange
and
war-like
figure
,
his
mass
of
black
hair
falling
to
his
shoulders
behind
and
cut
with
his
hunting
knife
to
a
rude
bang
upon
his
forehead
,
that
it
might
not
fall
before
his
eyes
.
His
straight
and
perfect
figure
,
muscled
as
the
best
of
the
ancient
Roman
gladiators
must
have
been
muscled
,
and
yet
with
the
soft
and
sinuous
curves
of
a
Greek
god
,
told
at
a
glance
the
wondrous
combination
of
enormous
strength
with
suppleness
and
speed
.
A
personification
,
was
Tarzan
of
the
Apes
,
of
the
primitive
man
,
the
hunter
,
the
warrior
.
With
the
noble
poise
of
his
handsome
head
upon
those
broad
shoulders
,
and
the
fire
of
life
and
intelligence
in
those
fine
,
clear
eyes
,
he
might
readily
have
typified
some
demigod
of
a
wild
and
warlike
bygone
people
of
his
ancient
forest
.
But
of
these
things
Tarzan
did
not
think
.
He
was
worried
because
he
had
not
clothing
to
indicate
to
all
the
jungle
folks
that
he
was
a
man
and
not
an
ape
,
and
grave
doubt
often
entered
his
mind
as
to
whether
he
might
not
yet
become
an
ape
.
Was
not
hair
commencing
to
grow
upon
his
face
?
All
the
apes
had
hair
upon
theirs
but
the
black
men
were
entirely
hairless
,
with
very
few
exceptions
.