[Taras Bulba and Other Tales by Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol]@TWC D-Link bookTaras Bulba and Other Tales CHAPTER XII 106/115
Then he inquired why his old mantle hung before him when he had a new cloak.
Next he fancied that he was standing before the prominent person, listening to a thorough setting-down, and saying, "Forgive me, your excellency!" but at last he began to curse, uttering the most horrible words, so that his aged landlady crossed herself, never in her life having heard anything of the kind from him, the more so as those words followed directly after the words "your excellency." Later on he talked utter nonsense, of which nothing could be made: all that was evident being, that his incoherent words and thoughts hovered ever about one thing, his cloak. At length poor Akakiy Akakievitch breathed his last.
They sealed up neither his room nor his effects, because, in the first place, there were no heirs, and, in the second, there was very little to inherit beyond a bundle of goose-quills, a quire of white official paper, three pairs of socks, two or three buttons which had burst off his trousers, and the mantle already known to the reader.
To whom all this fell, God knows.
I confess that the person who told me this tale took no interest in the matter.
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