The Adventures of Tom Sawyer


google search for The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
94 95 96 97 98

Quick Jump
1 85 170 254 339

fours. He "meow'd" with caution once or twice, as he went; then jumped  
to the roof of the woodshed and thence to the ground. Huckleberry Finn  
was there, with his dead cat. The boys moved off and disappeared in the  
gloom. At the end of half an hour they were wading through the tall  
grass of the graveyard.  
It was a graveyard of the old-fashioned Western kind. It was on a  
hill, about a mile and a half from the village. It had a crazy board  
fence around it, which leaned inward in places, and outward the rest of  
the time, but stood upright nowhere. Grass and weeds grew rank over the  
whole cemetery. All the old graves were sunken in, there was not a  
tombstone on the place; round-topped, worm-eaten boards staggered over  
the graves, leaning for support and finding none. "Sacred to the memory  
of" So-and-So had been painted on them once, but it could no longer  
have been read, on the most of them, now, even if there had been light.  
A faint wind moaned through the trees, and Tom feared it might be the  
spirits of the dead, complaining at being disturbed. The boys talked  
little, and only under their breath, for the time and the place and the  
pervading solemnity and silence oppressed their spirits. They found the  
sharp new heap they were seeking, and ensconced themselves within the  
protection of three great elms that grew in a bunch within a few feet  
of the grave.  
Then they waited in silence for what seemed a long time. The hooting  
of a distant owl was all the sound that troubled the dead stillness.  
9
6


Page
94 95 96 97 98

Quick Jump
1 85 170 254 339