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301
"
It
is
half
a
night
's
journey
--
at
full
speed
,
"
said
Bagheera
,
and
Baloo
looked
very
serious
.
"
I
will
go
as
fast
as
I
can
,
"
he
said
anxiously
.
302
"
We
dare
not
wait
for
thee
.
Follow
,
Baloo
.
We
must
go
on
the
quick-foot
--
Kaa
and
I.
"
303
"
Feet
or
no
feet
,
I
can
keep
abreast
of
all
thy
four
,
"
said
Kaa
shortly
.
Baloo
made
one
effort
to
hurry
,
but
had
to
sit
down
panting
,
and
so
they
left
him
to
come
on
later
,
while
Bagheera
hurried
forward
,
at
the
quick
panther-canter
.
Kaa
said
nothing
,
but
,
strive
as
Bagheera
might
,
the
huge
Rock-python
held
level
with
him
.
When
they
came
to
a
hill
stream
,
Bagheera
gained
,
because
he
bounded
across
while
Kaa
swam
,
his
head
and
two
feet
of
his
neck
clearing
the
water
,
but
on
level
ground
Kaa
made
up
the
distance
.
Отключить рекламу
304
"
By
the
Broken
Lock
that
freed
me
,
"
said
Bagheera
,
when
twilight
had
fallen
,
"
thou
art
no
slow
goer
!
"
305
"
I
am
hungry
,
"
said
Kaa
.
"
Besides
,
they
called
me
speckled
frog
.
"
306
"
Worm
--
earth-worm
,
and
yellow
to
boot
.
"
307
"
All
one
.
Let
us
go
on
,
"
and
Kaa
seemed
to
pour
himself
along
the
ground
,
finding
the
shortest
road
with
his
steady
eyes
,
and
keeping
to
it
.
Отключить рекламу
308
In
the
Cold
Lairs
the
Monkey-People
were
not
thinking
of
Mowgli
's
friends
at
all
.
They
had
brought
the
boy
to
the
Lost
City
,
and
were
very
much
pleased
with
themselves
for
the
time
.
Mowgli
had
never
seen
an
Indian
city
before
,
and
though
this
was
almost
a
heap
of
ruins
it
seemed
very
wonderful
and
splendid
.
Some
king
had
built
it
long
ago
on
a
little
hill
.
You
could
still
trace
the
stone
causeways
that
led
up
to
the
ruined
gates
where
the
last
splinters
of
wood
hung
to
the
worn
,
rusted
hinges
.
Trees
had
grown
into
and
out
of
the
walls
;
the
battlements
were
tumbled
down
and
decayed
,
and
wild
creepers
hung
out
of
the
windows
of
the
towers
on
the
walls
in
bushy
hanging
clumps
.
309
A
great
roofless
palace
crowned
the
hill
,
and
the
marble
of
the
courtyards
and
the
fountains
was
split
,
and
stained
with
red
and
green
,
and
the
very
cobblestones
in
the
courtyard
where
the
king
's
elephants
used
to
live
had
been
thrust
up
and
apart
by
grasses
and
young
trees
.
From
the
palace
you
could
see
the
rows
and
rows
of
roofless
houses
that
made
up
the
city
looking
like
empty
honeycombs
filled
with
blackness
;
the
shapeless
block
of
stone
that
had
been
an
idol
in
the
square
where
four
roads
met
;
the
pits
and
dimples
at
street
corners
where
the
public
wells
once
stood
,
and
the
shattered
domes
of
temples
with
wild
figs
sprouting
on
their
sides
.
The
monkeys
called
the
place
their
city
,
and
pretended
to
despise
the
Jungle-People
because
they
lived
in
the
forest
.
310
And
yet
they
never
knew
what
the
buildings
were
made
for
nor
how
to
use
them
.
They
would
sit
in
circles
on
the
hall
of
the
king
's
council
chamber
,
and
scratch
for
fleas
and
pretend
to
be
men
;
or
they
would
run
in
and
out
of
the
roofless
houses
and
collect
pieces
of
plaster
and
old
bricks
in
a
corner
,
and
forget
where
they
had
hidden
them
,
and
fight
and
cry
in
scuffling
crowds
,
and
then
break
off
to
play
up
and
down
the
terraces
of
the
king
's
garden
,
where
they
would
shake
the
rose
trees
and
the
oranges
in
sport
to
see
the
fruit
and
flowers
fall
.
They
explored
all
the
passages
and
dark
tunnels
in
the
palace
and
the
hundreds
of
little
dark
rooms
,
but
they
never
remembered
what
they
had
seen
and
what
they
had
not
;
and
so
drifted
about
in
ones
and
twos
or
crowds
telling
each
other
that
they
were
doing
as
men
did
.
They
drank
at
the
tanks
and
made
the
water
all
muddy
,
and
then
they
fought
over
it
,
and
then
they
would
all
rush
together
in
mobs
and
shout
:
"
There
is
no
one
in
the
jungle
so
wise
and
good
and
clever
and
strong
and
gentle
as
the
Bandar-log
.
"
Then
all
would
begin
again
till
they
grew
tired
of
the
city
and
went
back
to
the
tree-tops
,
hoping
the
Jungle-People
would
notice
them
.