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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com-The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain


CHAPTER XXVII

In Prison

THE cells were all crowded; so the two friends were chained in a large room
where persons charged with trifling offenses were commonly kept. They had
company, for there were some twenty manacled or fettered prisoners here, of
both sexes and of varying ages-an obscene and noisy gang. The king chafed
bitterly over the stupendous indignity thus put upon his royalty, but Hendon
was moody and taciturn. He was pretty thoroughly bewildered. He had come
home, a jubilant prodigal, expecting to find everybody wild with joy over his
return; and instead had got the cold shoulder and a jail. The promise and the
fulfilment differed so widely, that the effect was stunning; he could not decide
whether it was most tragic or most grotesque. He felt much as a man might who
had danced blithely out to enjoy a rainbow, and got struck by lightning.

But gradually his confused and tormenting thoughts settled down into some sort
of order, and then his mind centered itself upon Edith. He turned her conduct
over, and examined it in all lights, but he could not make anything satisfactory
out of it. Did she know him?- or didn’t she know him? It was a perplexing
puzzle, and occupied him a long time; but he ended, finally, with the conviction
that she did know him, and had repudiated him for interested reasons. He
wanted to load her name with curses now; but this name had so long been
sacred to him that he found he could not bring his tongue to profane it.
Wrapped in prison blankets of a soiled and tattered condition, Hendon and the
king passed a troubled night. For a bribe the jailer had furnished liquor to some
of the prisoners; singing of ribald songs, fighting, shouting, and carousing, was
the natural consequence. At last, awhile after midnight, a man attacked a woman
and nearly killed her by beating her over the head with his manacles before the
jailer could come to the rescue. The jailer restored peace by giving the man a
sound clubbing about the head and shoulders-then the carousing ceased; and
after that, all had an opportunity to sleep who did not mind the annoyance of
the moanings and groanings of the two wounded people.

During the ensuing week, the days and nights were of a monotonous sameness,
as to events; men whose faces Hendon remembered more or less distinctly came,
by day, to gaze at the ‘impostor’ and repudiate and insult him; and by night the
carousing and brawling went on, with symmetrical regularity. However, there
was a change of incident at last. The jailer brought in an old man, and said to
him: ‘The villain is in this room-cast thy old eyes about and see if thou canst say
which is he.’ Hendon glanced up, and experienced a pleasant sensation for the
first time since he had been in the jail. He said to himself, ‘This is Blake
Andrews, a servant all his life in my father’s family-a good honest soul, with a
right heart in his breast. That is, formerly. But none are true now; all are liars.
This man will know me-and will deny me, too, like the rest.’
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com-The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain



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