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521
"
Nothin
,
sir
.
"
522
"
I
don
t
want
any
of
that
.
Tell
me
.
"
523
"
I
was
we
were
just
tryin
to
give
somethin
to
Mr
.
Radley
.
"
Отключить рекламу
524
"
What
were
you
trying
to
give
him
?
"
525
"
Just
a
letter
.
"
526
"
Let
me
see
it
.
"
527
Jem
held
out
a
filthy
piece
of
paper
.
Atticus
took
it
and
tried
to
read
it
.
"
Why
do
you
want
Mr
.
Radley
to
come
out
?
"
Отключить рекламу
528
Dill
said
,
"
We
thought
he
might
enjoy
us
.
.
.
"
and
dried
up
when
Atticus
looked
at
him
.
529
"
Son
,
"
he
said
to
Jem
,
"
I
m
going
to
tell
you
something
and
tell
you
one
time
:
stop
tormenting
that
man
.
That
goes
for
the
other
two
of
you
.
"
530
What
Mr
.
Radley
did
was
his
own
business
.
If
he
wanted
to
come
out
,
he
would
.
If
he
wanted
to
stay
inside
his
own
house
he
had
the
right
to
stay
inside
free
from
the
attentions
of
inquisitive
children
,
which
was
a
mild
term
for
the
likes
of
us
.
How
would
we
like
it
if
Atticus
barged
in
on
us
without
knocking
,
when
we
were
in
our
rooms
at
night
?
We
were
,
in
effect
,
doing
the
same
thing
to
Mr
.
Radley
.
What
Mr
.
Radley
did
might
seem
peculiar
to
us
,
but
it
did
not
seem
peculiar
to
him
.
Furthermore
,
had
it
never
occurred
to
us
that
the
civil
way
to
communicate
with
another
being
was
by
the
front
door
instead
of
a
side
window
?
Lastly
,
we
were
to
stay
away
from
that
house
until
we
were
invited
there
,
we
were
not
to
play
an
asinine
game
he
had
seen
us
playing
or
make
fun
of
anybody
on
this
street
or
in
this
town