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Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer
Capítulo 26, Página 3
"Well,
he
must
have
been
a
great
guy."
"I
bet
he
was,
Huck.
Oh,
he
was
the
noblest
man
ever.
There
aren't
any
men
like
him
now.
He
could
beat
any
man
in
England
with
one
hand
tied
behind
him.
And
he
could
shoot
an
arrow
and
hit
a
small
coin
every
time,
a
mile
and
a
half
away."
"What's
a
yew
bow?"
"I
don't
know.
It's
some
kind
of
bow,
of
course.
If
he
only
hit
the
edge
of
the
coin,
he
would
sit
down
and
cry—and
curse.
But
we'll
play
Robin
Hood—it's
great
fun.
I'll
teach
you."
"I'm
in."
So
they
played
Robin
Hood
all
afternoon.
Sometimes
they
looked
at
the
haunted
house
and
talked
about
what
might
happen
there
tomorrow.
As
the
sun
went
down,
they
went
home
through
the
long
shadows
of
the
trees
and
soon
disappeared
into
the
forests
of
Cardiff
Hill.
On
Saturday,
just
after
noon,
the
boys
were
at
the
dead
tree
again.
They
smoked
and
talked
in
the
shade.
Then
they
dug
a
little
in
their
last
hole,
not
with
much
hope,
but
because
Tom
said
people
often
gave
up
treasure
when
they
were
close
to
it,
and
then
someone
else
found
it
with
one
shovel
thrust.
But
it
didn't
work
this
time,
so
the
boys
took
their
tools
and
left,
feeling
they
had
done
everything
they
could
in
treasure-hunting.
When
they
got
to
the
haunted
house,
it
was
so
quiet
and
strange
under
the
hot
sun.
The
place
was
lonely
and
sad,
so
they
were
scared
to
go
in
at
first.
Then
they
crept
to
the
door
and
peeked
inside.
They
saw
a
room
with
weeds,
no
floor,
an
old
fireplace,
empty
windows,
and
a
broken
staircase.
Cobwebs
hung
everywhere.
They
went
inside
quietly,
hearts
beating
fast,
whispering,
and
ready
to
run
if
needed.
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Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer — A2 Inglés | Cuentana