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- Приключения Гекльберри Финна
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"
Because
Mary
Jane
'll
be
in
mourning
from
this
out
;
and
first
you
know
the
nigger
that
does
up
the
rooms
will
get
an
order
to
box
these
duds
up
and
put
'em
away
;
and
do
you
reckon
a
nigger
can
run
across
money
and
not
borrow
some
of
it
?
"
"
Your
head
's
level
agin
,
duke
,
"
says
the
king
;
and
he
comes
a-fumbling
under
the
curtain
two
or
three
foot
from
where
I
was
.
I
stuck
tight
to
the
wall
and
kept
mighty
still
,
though
quivery
;
and
I
wondered
what
them
fellows
would
say
to
me
if
they
catched
me
;
and
I
tried
to
think
what
I
'd
better
do
if
they
did
catch
me
.
But
the
king
he
got
the
bag
before
I
could
think
more
than
about
a
half
a
thought
,
and
he
never
suspicioned
I
was
around
.
They
took
and
shoved
the
bag
through
a
rip
in
the
straw
tick
that
was
under
the
feather-bed
,
and
crammed
it
in
a
foot
or
two
amongst
the
straw
and
said
it
was
all
right
now
,
because
a
nigger
only
makes
up
the
feather-bed
,
and
do
n't
turn
over
the
straw
tick
only
about
twice
a
year
,
and
so
it
war
n't
in
no
danger
of
getting
stole
now
.
But
I
knowed
better
I
had
it
out
of
there
before
they
was
half-way
down
stairs
.
I
groped
along
up
to
my
cubby
,
and
hid
it
there
till
I
could
get
a
chance
to
do
better
.
I
judged
I
better
hide
it
outside
of
the
house
somewheres
,
because
if
they
missed
it
they
would
give
the
house
a
good
ransacking
:
I
knowed
that
very
well
.
Then
I
turned
in
,
with
my
clothes
all
on
;
but
I
could
n't
a
gone
to
sleep
if
I
'd
a
wanted
to
,
I
was
in
such
a
sweat
to
get
through
with
the
business
.
By
and
by
I
heard
the
king
and
the
duke
come
up
;
so
I
rolled
off
my
pallet
and
laid
with
my
chin
at
the
top
of
my
ladder
,
and
waited
to
see
if
anything
was
going
to
happen
.
But
nothing
did
.
So
I
held
on
till
all
the
late
sounds
had
quit
and
the
early
ones
had
n't
begun
yet
;
and
then
I
slipped
down
the
ladder
.
I
CREPT
to
their
doors
and
listened
;
they
was
snoring
.
So
I
tiptoed
along
,
and
got
down
stairs
all
right
.
There
war
n't
a
sound
anywheres
.
I
peeped
through
a
crack
of
the
dining-room
door
,
and
see
the
men
that
was
watching
the
corpse
all
sound
asleep
on
their
chairs
.
The
door
was
open
into
the
parlor
,
where
the
corpse
was
laying
,
and
there
was
a
candle
in
both
rooms
.
I
passed
along
,
and
the
parlor
door
was
open
;
but
I
see
there
war
n't
nobody
in
there
but
the
remainders
of
Peter
;
so
I
shoved
on
by
;
but
the
front
door
was
locked
,
and
the
key
was
n't
there
.
Just
then
I
heard
somebody
coming
down
the
stairs
,
back
behind
me
.
I
run
in
the
parlor
and
took
a
swift
look
around
,
and
the
only
place
I
see
to
hide
the
bag
was
in
the
coffin
.
The
lid
was
shoved
along
about
a
foot
,
showing
the
dead
man
's
face
down
in
there
,
with
a
wet
cloth
over
it
,
and
his
shroud
on
.
I
tucked
the
money-bag
in
under
the
lid
,
just
down
beyond
where
his
hands
was
crossed
,
which
made
me
creep
,
they
was
so
cold
,
and
then
I
run
back
across
the
room
and
in
behind
the
door
.
The
person
coming
was
Mary
Jane
.
She
went
to
the
coffin
,
very
soft
,
and
kneeled
down
and
looked
in
;
then
she
put
up
her
handkerchief
,
and
I
see
she
begun
to
cry
,
though
I
could
n't
hear
her
,
and
her
back
was
to
me
.
I
slid
out
,
and
as
I
passed
the
dining-room
I
thought
I
'd
make
sure
them
watchers
had
n't
seen
me
;
so
I
looked
through
the
crack
,
and
everything
was
all
right
.
They
had
n't
stirred
.
I
slipped
up
to
bed
,
feeling
ruther
blue
,
on
accounts
of
the
thing
playing
out
that
way
after
I
had
took
so
much
trouble
and
run
so
much
resk
about
it
.
Says
I
,
if
it
could
stay
where
it
is
,
all
right
;
because
when
we
get
down
the
river
a
hundred
mile
or
two
I
could
write
back
to
Mary
Jane
,
and
she
could
dig
him
up
again
and
get
it
;
but
that
ai
n't
the
thing
that
's
going
to
happen
;
the
thing
that
's
going
to
happen
is
,
the
money
'll
be
found
when
they
come
to
screw
on
the
lid
.
Then
the
king
'll
get
it
again
,
and
it
'll
be
a
long
day
before
he
gives
anybody
another
chance
to
smouch
it
from
him
.
Of
course
I
WANTED
to
slide
down
and
get
it
out
of
there
,
but
I
das
n't
try
it
.
Every
minute
it
was
getting
earlier
now
,
and
pretty
soon
some
of
them
watchers
would
begin
to
stir
,
and
I
might
get
catched
--
catched
with
six
thousand
dollars
in
my
hands
that
nobody
had
n't
hired
me
to
take
care
of
.
I
do
n't
wish
to
be
mixed
up
in
no
such
business
as
that
,
I
says
to
myself
.
When
I
got
down
stairs
in
the
morning
the
parlor
was
shut
up
,
and
the
watchers
was
gone
.
There
war
n't
nobody
around
but
the
family
and
the
widow
Bartley
and
our
tribe
.
I
watched
their
faces
to
see
if
anything
had
been
happening
,
but
I
could
n't
tell
.
Towards
the
middle
of
the
day
the
undertaker
come
with
his
man
,
and
they
set
the
coffin
in
the
middle
of
the
room
on
a
couple
of
chairs
,
and
then
set
all
our
chairs
in
rows
,
and
borrowed
more
from
the
neighbors
till
the
hall
and
the
parlor
and
the
dining-room
was
full
.