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CHAPTER FIFTEEN

作品:The Last Battle 作者:C·S·刘易斯 字数: 下载本书  举报本章节错误/更新太慢

    FURt;KNO, O arlike Kings,quot; said Emet;and you, O ladies es t I am Emetarkaan of ty  of te. I came lately into Narnia y otarkaan Noo meet you in battle. But o go in  disguised as mercs (o rickery, ted from me. And most of all  upon a Monkey, and o be said t tasas desire o knoeful to me.

    quot;And, as you ogetside traer nig fort of t I could not s bo. But I t, tarkaan is deceived by t comes out of table is neitas   o t tarkaan did not believe in it ood t  believe in tas all: for if o mock  him?

    quot;ood t rage fell upon me and I  true tas strike doarkaan ongue and ed to see

    last nig not fort said  t all aso pretend  t t pass one by one into to myself,  Doubtless tion. But error, to myself, Surely true tas knourned into er inside me because of tness and terror  of tas my desire ronger t force upon my knees to stay  trembling, and on my teet t cter, and resolved to  look upon taso go into tarkaan, t me go.

    quot;As soon as I  t  I found  myself in t sunligside. But I ime to marvel at tely I o fig one of our o tarkaan  o slay any s: so t true servant of taster o fig  behe door.

    quot;t me and saness.

    And I said, By t place: it may be t I am come  into try of taso journey into trange country and to  seek him.

    quot;So I  over mucable trees till lo! in a narroo  meet me a great Lion. trics; ness of  is liquid  in terrible tain of Lagour, and in beauty  is in t of t. t  and t, Surely t I as  is better to see to be tisroc of t to have seen

    t do  I said, Alas, Lord, I am no son  of t t of tas done to  tas as service done to me. t desire for anding, I overcame my fear and questioned t  true, as t tas t  against me) and said, It is false. Not because  because es, I take to me t done to  kinds t no service o as is by me t ruly s not,  and it is I  is tasased. Dost  tand, C and. But I said also  (for trutrained me), Yet I as not  so long  and so truly.

    For all find ruly seek.

    quot;took arembling from my limbs and  caused me to stand upon my feet. And after t,  muc t  go furturned  in a  storm and flurry of gold and was gone suddenly.

    quot;And since to find  t it even   as a dog -”

    quot;Es t?quot; said one of the Dogs.

    quot;Sir,quot; said Emet;It is but a fashion of speech which we have in  Calormen.”

    quot;ell, I cant say its one I like very muc; said the Dog.

    quot; mean any ; said an older Dog.

    quot;After all, we call our puppies Boys w behave properly.”

    quot;So ; said t Dog. quot;Or girls.”

    quot;S-s-s; said t;ts not a nice o use. Remember where  you are.”

    quot;Look!quot; said Jill suddenly. Someone imidly, to meet  ture on four feet, all silvery-grey. And tared at en seconds before five or six voices said all at once, quot;s old Puzzle!quot; t  made an extraordinary  difference. iful donkey , grey coat and sucle,  face

    t if you  w Jill and Lucy did -  rus your arms round roked  his ears.

    tures but o tell trut of t of Aslans  of t nonsense about dressing up in a lion-skin t   kno er ;And Ive never tasted  suc; said Puzzle), ;But  Aslan, Im sure I dont kno; he added.

    quot;Youll find it will be all rig; said Queen Lucy.

    t foroget seemed to be tion Aslan  ;Furt; Many otures  t grassy country here was no crowding.

    It still seemed to be early, and t on stopping to look round and to look bely because it iful but partly also because t it and.

    quot;Peter,quot; said Lucy, quot;whis, do you suppose?”

    quot;I dont kno; said t;It reminds me of some  give it a name. Could it be somewayed for a holiday when we were very,  very small?”

    quot;It ace. quot;I bet  t a country like t t  get a blue like tains in our world.”

    quot;Is it not Aslans country?quot; said tirian.

    quot;Not like Aslans country on top of t mountain beyond tern end of  the world,”

    said Jill. quot;Ive been there.”

    quot;If you ask me,quot; said Edmund, quot;its like someains aains beyond tains o see from Narnia, terfall?”

    quot;Yes, so t; said Peter. quot;Only these are bigger.”

    quot;I dont t; said Lucy.  quot;But look there.”

    Sed Souto t, and everyone stopped and turned to  look. quot;those

    ; said Lucy, quot;t  thern border of Narnia?”

    quot;Like!quot; cried Edmund after a moments silence. quot;ly like.  Look, t Pire o Arching!”

    quot;And yet t like,quot; said Lucy. quot;t. t know...”

    quot;More like t; said tly.

    Suddenly Farsigy or forty feet  up into ted on the ground.

    quot;Kings and Queens,quot; ;tinsmuir, Beaversdam,  t River, and Cair Paravel still sern Sea. Narnia is  not dead. this is Narnia.”

    quot;But  be?quot; said Peter. quot;For Aslan told us older ones t o Narnia, and here we are.”

    quot;Yes,quot; said Eustace. quot;And  all destroyed and t out.”

    quot;And its all so different,quot; said Lucy.

    quot;t,quot; said t;Listen, Peter. o Narnia,  t t   t   mattered, all tures, o t is different;  as different as a real t; irred everyone like a trumpet as  s all in Plato, all in Plato: bless me, eac t; t ly like t of t otead of golden.  very quickly t makes you  serious. It is too good to e on jokes.

    It is as o explain  land  from t o tell you s of t country taste. Per  some idea of it if you t

    looked out on a lovely bay of t ains. And in t room opposite to turned a  sig sea or t valley, all over again, in t t  at time t - deeper, more ory: in a story you  very muc to kno. try:  every rock and flo meant more. I cant describe  it any better t: if ever you get t I mean.

    It  everyone ! try! I belong  till no it sometimes looked a little like ther in!”

    o a great gallop - a Unicorns  gallop,  no strange to run, and to  tonis, t t only t even fat little Puzzle and s-legged Poggin t in a car  a ry fle  as if t from train. Faster and faster t no one got  or tired or out of breath.