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Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer
Capítulo 19, Página 1
Tom
arrived
at
home
in
a
dreary
mood,
and
the
first
thing
his
aunt
said
to
him
showed
him
that
he
had
brought
his
sorrows
to
an
unpromising
market:
“Tom,
I’ve
a
notion
to
skin
you
alive!”
“Auntie,
what
have
I
done?”
“Well,
you’ve
done
enough.
Here
I
go
over
to
Sereny
Harper,
like
an
old
softy,
expecting
I’m
going
to
make
her
believe
all
that
rubbage
about
that
dream,
when
lo
and
behold
you
she’d
found
out
from
Joe
that
you
was
over
here
and
heard
all
the
talk
we
had
that
night.
Tom,
I
don’t
know
what
is
to
become
of
a
boy
that
will
act
like
that.
It
makes
me
feel
so
bad
to
think
you
could
let
me
go
to
Sereny
Harper
and
make
such
a
fool
of
myself
and
never
say
a
word.”
This
was
a
new
aspect
of
the
thing.
His
smartness
of
the
morning
had
seemed
to
Tom
a
good
joke
before,
and
very
ingenious.
It
merely
looked
mean
and
shabby
now.
He
hung
his
head
and
could
not
think
of
anything
to
say
for
a
moment.
Then
he
said:
“Auntie,
I
wish
I
hadn’t
done
it—but
I
didn’t
think.”
“Oh,
child,
you
never
think.
You
never
think
of
anything
but
your
own
selfishness.
You
could
think
to
come
all
the
way
over
here
from
Jackson’s
Island
in
the
night
to
laugh
at
our
troubles,
and
you
could
think
to
fool
me
with
a
lie
about
a
dream;
but
you
couldn’t
ever
think
to
pity
us
and
save
us
from
sorrow.”
“Auntie,
I
know
now
it
was
mean,
but
I
didn’t
mean
to
be
mean.
I
didn’t,
honest.
And
besides,
I
didn’t
come
over
here
to
laugh
at
you
that
night.”
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Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer — C1 Inglés | Cuentana