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= The Monkeys Wena OXFORD BOOKWORMS (enc nrsthe Oufort oh cloe ~ Black Series ~~ i sabe ae Lasgo aor sree 1400nednt Spar as To ary “Retin Baers Sines cle Sie Con Doi thee Ree ‘Tenge oe re fee Thera afc Ops Towra Thee Ren Cer ren 2 00 nt fg 800m Ns ene er ee “Sr Antu Can Daye ‘hedeado ese Cle Bene seca htc Dacor Now Ysa 0. er) {Eker ase mo ao nr) 00 ewer ~rege6 2s00 nen “Set wary Sowa rer Tomas ody Livesey Et Se erties Jt Brey eshand lw Soren Sider ote Who her sore ‘Wye arcs Demand ape Dene Repl Mi nl nm nm ware ~ Green Series ~~ apn of aad eso we or Se 3 m8 ene eee Rint Cre haw nae Fete and tr Secon Kes ening LiCl Gers are Journ Foitio kent ote fenSorkoonsn) Taco ee Cer ho ‘Te ive Sed Svar Sg 100 an Fichter ands aby Hope ‘Teor uns dp Barat One ers OXFORD BOOKWORMS COLLECTION, ion yt hao cc nd mod Tam hela ny ay Pe le Fame Cente Gere re Nea "Seems St, Wang a al ‘ar nr ete rae ‘icon Mga PE Bao Creme a ee gl No, Fd Spas Remon Co) ‘ty ope ae The Monkey’s Paw W.W. Jacobs retold by Diane Mowat — OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS “leon Set, Oslord ORE 6DP nord Now York Ah Arlnd Bango Bombay cats Cape Tow Dar Satan De Kain Langer Madras Model Monroe ‘Mate Cy Nate ac Sao oa tl ater Ti ron sd oxoan ence sre ae fOr niet Pro hi mpi sion {© Oo Cerny re 189 vktimpeon 4 Do amathced hucoving te ered seed n+ real yuo nite, “ny farm aby any am ler mechs, pomoprine rr her wit te or ‘ven erminon of Onfnd Unies rs “Ths bake wl bjt the sin hate al me, ‘nay af ade ewe be eyes hii Crew elated en the phe sme st oem af igo ovr or ta a nc Publ an wth s ima condom dig “oats by mp cate abun pcan ‘The unos eal te Soke of tbr a ay Imprecmae of he Ena of W. Wasi or permis wo ‘eat the sini eon. inert by Kevin Joes ridin gland by Cap La, Sts ple Chapter 1 ‘twas cold and dark out in the road and the rain did not stop for a minute. But in the little living-room of ‘number 12 Castle Road it was nice and warm. Old Mr White and his son, Herbert, played chess and Mrs White sat and watched them. The old woman was happy because her husband and her son were good friends and they liked to be together. “Herbert's a good son,’ she thought. "We waited a long time for him and 1 ‘was nearly forty when he was born, but we are a happy family.” And old Mrs White smiled, twas true. Herbert was young and he laughed a lot, but his mother and his father laughed with him, They had nor got much money, but they were a very happy lite family. ‘The two men did not talk because they played carefully. The toom was quiet, but the noise ofthe rain was worse now and they could hear it on the windows. Suddenly old Mr White looked up. ‘Listen to the rain!” he sid "Yes, it’s a bad night,’ Herbert answered. ‘I's not a ‘g00d night to be out. But is your friend, Tom Morris, coming tonight?”

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