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The
king
says
,
timid
,
and
still
a-snuffling
:
"
Why
,
duke
,
it
was
you
that
said
make
up
the
deffisit
;
it
war
n't
me
.
"
"
Dry
up
!
I
do
n't
want
to
hear
no
more
out
of
you
!
"
says
the
duke
.
"
And
NOW
you
see
what
you
GOT
by
it
.
They
've
got
all
their
own
money
back
,
and
all
of
OURN
but
a
shekel
or
two
BESIDES
.
G'long
to
bed
,
and
do
n't
you
deffersit
ME
no
more
deffersits
,
long
's
YOU
live
!
"
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So
the
king
sneaked
into
the
wigwam
and
took
to
his
bottle
for
comfort
,
and
before
long
the
duke
tackled
HIS
bottle
;
and
so
in
about
a
half
an
hour
they
was
as
thick
as
thieves
again
,
and
the
tighter
they
got
the
lovinger
they
got
,
and
went
off
a-snoring
in
each
other
's
arms
.
They
both
got
powerful
mellow
,
but
I
noticed
the
king
did
n't
get
mellow
enough
to
forget
to
remember
to
not
deny
about
hiding
the
money-bag
again
.
That
made
me
feel
easy
and
satisfied
.
Of
course
when
they
got
to
snoring
we
had
a
long
gabble
,
and
I
told
Jim
everything
.
WE
das
n't
stop
again
at
any
town
for
days
and
days
;
kept
right
along
down
the
river
.
We
was
down
south
in
the
warm
weather
now
,
and
a
mighty
long
ways
from
home
.
We
begun
to
come
to
trees
with
Spanish
moss
on
them
,
hanging
down
from
the
limbs
like
long
,
gray
beards
.
It
was
the
first
I
ever
see
it
growing
,
and
it
made
the
woods
look
solemn
and
dismal
.
So
now
the
frauds
reckoned
they
was
out
of
danger
,
and
they
begun
to
work
the
villages
again
.
First
they
done
a
lecture
on
temperance
;
but
they
did
n't
make
enough
for
them
both
to
get
drunk
on
.
Then
in
another
village
they
started
a
dancing-school
;
but
they
did
n't
know
no
more
how
to
dance
than
a
kangaroo
does
;
so
the
first
prance
they
made
the
general
public
jumped
in
and
pranced
them
out
of
town
.
Another
time
they
tried
to
go
at
yellocution
;
but
they
did
n't
yellocute
long
till
the
audience
got
up
and
give
them
a
solid
good
cussing
,
and
made
them
skip
out
.
They
tackled
missionarying
,
and
mesmerizing
,
and
doctoring
,
and
telling
fortunes
,
and
a
little
of
everything
;
but
they
could
n't
seem
to
have
no
luck
.
So
at
last
they
got
just
about
dead
broke
,
and
laid
around
the
raft
as
she
floated
along
,
thinking
and
thinking
,
and
never
saying
nothing
,
by
the
half
a
day
at
a
time
,
and
dreadful
blue
and
desperate
.
And
at
last
they
took
a
change
and
begun
to
lay
their
heads
together
in
the
wigwam
and
talk
low
and
confidential
two
or
three
hours
at
a
time
.
Jim
and
me
got
uneasy
.
We
did
n't
like
the
look
of
it
.
We
judged
they
was
studying
up
some
kind
of
worse
deviltry
than
ever
.
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We
turned
it
over
and
over
,
and
at
last
we
made
up
our
minds
they
was
going
to
break
into
somebody
's
house
or
store
,
or
was
going
into
the
counterfeit-money
business
,
or
something
.
So
then
we
was
pretty
scared
,
and
made
up
an
agreement
that
we
would
n't
have
nothing
in
the
world
to
do
with
such
actions
,
and
if
we
ever
got
the
least
show
we
would
give
them
the
cold
shake
and
clear
out
and
leave
them
behind
.
Well
,
early
one
morning
we
hid
the
raft
in
a
good
,
safe
place
about
two
mile
below
a
little
bit
of
a
shabby
village
named
Pikesville
,
and
the
king
he
went
ashore
and
told
us
all
to
stay
hid
whilst
he
went
up
to
town
and
smelt
around
to
see
if
anybody
had
got
any
wind
of
the
Royal
Nonesuch
there
yet
.
(
"
House
to
rob
,
you
MEAN
,
"
says
I
to
myself
;
"
and
when
you
get
through
robbing
it
you
'll
come
back
here
and
wonder
what
has
become
of
me
and
Jim
and
the
raft
--
and
you
'll
have
to
take
it
out
in
wondering
.
"
)
And
he
said
if
he
war
n't
back
by
midday
the
duke
and
me
would
know
it
was
all
right
,
and
we
was
to
come
along
.
So
we
stayed
where
we
was
.
The
duke
he
fretted
and
sweated
around
,
and
was
in
a
mighty
sour
way
.
He
scolded
us
for
everything
,
and
we
could
n't
seem
to
do
nothing
right
;
he
found
fault
with
every
little
thing
.
Something
was
a-brewing
,
sure
.
I
was
good
and
glad
when
midday
come
and
no
king
;
we
could
have
a
change
,
anyway
--
and
maybe
a
chance
for
THE
chance
on
top
of
it
.
So
me
and
the
duke
went
up
to
the
village
,
and
hunted
around
there
for
the
king
,
and
by
and
by
we
found
him
in
the
back
room
of
a
little
low
doggery
,
very
tight
,
and
a
lot
of
loafers
bullyragging
him
for
sport
,
and
he
a-cussing
and
a-threatening
with
all
his
might
,
and
so
tight
he
could
n't
walk
,
and
could
n't
do
nothing
to
them
.
The
duke
he
begun
to
abuse
him
for
an
old
fool
,
and
the
king
begun
to
sass
back
,
and
the
minute
they
was
fairly
at
it
I
lit
out
and
shook
the
reefs
out
of
my
hind
legs
,
and
spun
down
the
river
road
like
a
deer
,
for
I
see
our
chance
;
and
I
made
up
my
mind
that
it
would
be
a
long
day
before
they
ever
see
me
and
Jim
again
.
I
got
down
there
all
out
of
breath
but
loaded
up
with
joy
,
and
sung
out
: