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- Говард Лавкрафт
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- Тень над Иннсмутом
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- Стр. 13/41
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"
Never
was
nobody
like
Cap'n
Obed
--
old
limb
o
'
Satan
!
Heh
,
heh
!
I
kin
mind
him
a-tellin
'
abaout
furren
parts
,
an
'
callin
'
all
the
folks
stupid
for
goin
'
to
Christian
meetin
'
an
'
bearin
'
their
burdens
meek
an
'
lowly
.
Says
they
'd
orter
git
better
gods
like
some
o
'
the
folks
in
the
Injies
--
gods
as
ud
bring
'em
good
fishin
'
in
return
for
their
sacrifices
,
an
'
ud
reely
answer
folks
's
prayers
.
"
Matt
Eliot
,
his
fust
mate
,
talked
a
lot
too
,
only
he
was
again
'
folks
's
doin
'
any
heathen
things
.
Told
abaout
an
island
east
of
Othaheite
whar
they
was
a
lot
o
'
stone
ruins
older
'n
anybody
knew
anything
abaout
,
kind
o
'
like
them
on
Ponape
,
in
the
Carolines
,
but
with
carven
's
of
faces
that
looked
like
the
big
statues
on
Easter
Island
.
Thar
was
a
little
volcanic
island
near
thar
,
too
,
whar
they
was
other
ruins
with
diff
're
nt
carvin
'
--
ruins
all
wore
away
like
they
'd
ben
under
the
sea
onct
,
an
'
with
picters
of
awful
monsters
all
over
'em
.
"
Wal
,
Sir
,
Matt
he
says
the
natives
araound
thar
had
all
the
fish
they
cud
ketch
,
an
'
sported
bracelets
an
'
armlets
an
'
head
rigs
made
aout
o
'
a
queer
kind
o
'
gold
an
'
covered
with
picters
o
'
monsters
jest
like
the
ones
carved
over
the
ruins
on
the
little
island
--
sorter
fish-like
frogs
or
froglike
fishes
that
was
drawed
in
all
kinds
o
'
positions
likes
they
was
human
bein
's
.
Nobody
cud
get
aout
o
'
them
whar
they
got
all
the
stuff
,
an
'
all
the
other
natives
wondered
haow
they
managed
to
find
fish
in
plenty
even
when
the
very
next
island
had
lean
pickin
's
.
Matt
he
got
to
wonderon
'
too
an
'
so
did
Cap'n
Obed
.
Obed
he
notices
,
besides
,
that
lots
of
the
hn
's
ome
young
folks
ud
drop
aout
o
'
sight
fer
good
from
year
to
year
,
an
'
that
they
wa
n't
many
old
folks
around
.
Also
,
he
thinks
some
of
the
folks
looked
durned
queer
even
for
Kanakys
.
"
It
took
Obed
to
git
the
truth
aout
o
'
them
heathen
.
I
du
n't
know
haow
he
done
it
,
but
he
begun
by
tradin
'
fer
the
gold-like
things
they
wore
.
Ast
'em
whar
they
come
from
,
an
'
ef
they
cud
git
more
,
an
'
finally
wormed
the
story
aout
o
'
the
old
chief
--
Walakea
,
they
called
him
.
Nobody
but
Obed
ud
ever
a
believed
the
old
yeller
devil
,
but
the
Cap'n
cud
read
folks
like
they
was
books
.
Heh
,
heh
!
Nobody
never
believes
me
naow
when
I
tell
'em
,
an
'
I
du
n't
s
'
pose
you
will
,
young
feller
--
though
come
to
look
at
ye
,
ye
hev
kind
o
'
got
them
sharp-readin
'
eyes
like
Obed
had
.
"
The
old
man
's
whisper
grew
fainter
,
and
I
found
myself
shuddering
at
the
terrible
and
sincere
portentousness
of
his
intonation
,
even
though
I
knew
his
tale
could
be
nothing
but
drunken
phantasy
.
"
Wal
,
Sir
,
Obed
he
larnt
that
they
's
things
on
this
arth
as
most
folks
never
heerd
about
--
an
'
would
n't
believe
ef
they
did
hear
.
It
seems
these
Kanakys
was
sacrificin
'
heaps
o
'
their
young
men
an
'
maidens
to
some
kind
o
'
god-things
that
lived
under
the
sea
,
an
'
gittin
'
all
kinds
o
'
favour
in
return
.
They
met
the
things
on
the
little
islet
with
the
queer
ruins
,
an
'
it
seems
them
awful
picters
o
'
frog-fish
monsters
was
supposed
to
be
picters
o
'
these
things
.
Mebbe
they
was
the
kind
o
'
critters
as
got
all
the
mermaid
stories
an
'
sech
started
.
"
They
had
all
kinds
a
'
cities
on
the
sea-bottom
,
an
'
this
island
was
heaved
up
from
thar
.
Seem
they
was
some
of
the
things
alive
in
the
stone
buildin
's
when
the
island
come
up
sudden
to
the
surface
,
That
's
how
the
Kanakys
got
wind
they
was
daown
thar
.
Made
sign-talk
as
soon
as
they
got
over
bein
'
skeert
,
an
'
pieced
up
a
bargain
afore
long
.
"
Them
things
liked
human
sacrifices
.
Had
had
'em
ages
afore
,
but
lost
track
o
'
the
upper
world
after
a
time
.
What
they
done
to
the
victims
it
ai
n't
fer
me
to
say
,
an
'
I
guess
Obed
wa
'n'
t
none
too
sharp
abaout
askin
'
.
But
it
was
all
right
with
the
heathens
,
because
they
'd
ben
havin
'
a
hard
time
an
'
was
desp
'
rate
abaout
everything
.
They
give
a
sarten
number
o
'
young
folks
to
the
sea-things
twice
every
year
--
May
--
Eve
an
'
Hallawe'en
--
reg
'
lar
as
cud
be
.
Also
give
some
a
'
the
carved
knick-knacks
they
made
.
What
the
things
agreed
to
give
in
return
was
plenty
a
'
fish
--
they
druv
'em
in
from
all
over
the
sea
--
an
'
a
few
gold-like
things
naow
an
'
then
.
"
Wal
,
as
I
says
,
the
natives
met
the
things
on
the
little
volcanic
islet
--
goin
'
thar
in
canoes
with
the
sacrifices
et
cet
'
ry
,
and
bringin
'
back
any
of
the
gold-like
jools
as
was
comin
'
to
'em
.
At
fust
the
things
did
n't
never
go
onto
the
main
island
,
but
arter
a
time
they
come
to
want
to
.
Seems
they
hankered
arter
mixin
'
with
the
folks
,
an
'
havin
'
j'
int
ceremonies
on
the
big
days
--
May
--
Eve
an
'
Hallowe'en
.
Ye
see
,
they
was
able
to
live
both
in
ant
aout
o
'
water
--
what
they
call
amphibians
,
I
guess
.
The
Kanakys
told
'em
as
haow
folks
from
the
other
islands
might
wanta
wipe
'
an
out
if
they
got
wind
o
'
their
bein
'
thar
,
but
they
says
they
du
n't
keer
much
,
because
they
cud
wipe
aout
the
hull
brood
o
'
humans
ef
they
was
willin
'
to
bother
--
that
is
,
any
as
did
n't
be
,
sarten
signs
sech
as
was
used
onct
by
the
lost
Old
Ones
,
whoever
they
was
.
But
not
wantin
'
to
bother
,
they
'd
lay
low
when
anybody
visited
the
island
.