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首页THE VOYAGE OF THE DAWN TREADERCHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER SEVEN

        URE ENDED

        "LOOK at ; said Edmund.

        "Look at t; said Caspian.

        "A little    like a star," said Drinian. " before.”

        "Seen it!" said Caspian. " is t Narnian house.

        tesians arm-ring.”

        "Villain," said Reepico t;; But tly.

        "Or per; said Lucy, "tesian, turned into a dragon -    under an e, you know.”

        "It    be eit; said Edmund. "All dragons collect gold. But I ts a safe guess t Octesian got no furthis island.”

        "Are you tesian?" said Lucy to t    sadly ss ;Are you someone enced - someone human, I mean?”

        It nodded violently.

        And ted after - "Youre not - ace by any ce?”

        Aaodded errible dragon ail in tions I    put    doing) to avoid tears which flowed from his    eyes.

        Lucy tried o sole o kiss t;; and several assured Eustace t tand by o be some o ory, but    speak. More t    folloempted to e it for t, t place Eustaever    books) o tell a story    straig o use o e and    built f any     nearly to tide came in and    ts rodden on or actaly sail. And all    t anyone s are for ts    I O SL EE . . . RGOS AGRONS I MEAN DRANGONS

        CAVE CAUSE It-AS DEAD AND AING SO hAR . . . OKE UP AND COU . . .

        GEt OFFF MI ARM OhER . . .

        It    Eustaces cer o    ainous and ined only by s and droves of    back many carcasses as provisions for too, for c ail so t it    didnt knoill doesnt kno e a fe    o let ot    iriumpo camp a great tall piree s in a distant valley and al mast. And    in t turned etimes did after t to everyone, for ty         sides a     obstinate fire.

        Sometimes ake a select party for a fly on    ts, t- like valleys and far out over to t of darker blue on t be land.

        te neo ill more, of liking    ot kept Eustace from despair. For it like    afraid to be alone    o be    hers.

        On t being used as a -er bottle er. On sucly to    stant    forter. t t doo to be out of t ace riking illustration    of turn of Fortunes        ed in) s, poets, lovers, astronomers, py into t distressing circumstances, and of    did not, pering at time, but    it    aaever fot it.

        But of course o do o sail. tried not to talk of it    he deck?

        And ores to to    balance," or, "ould to;ould o keep up by flying?"    and (most often of all), "But o feed ; And poor Eustace    realized more and

        more t si day igated    nuisand t er nuisaill. Ao     as t bracelet ate into    it only made it o tear at it    teet    earing no nights.

        About six days after to        getting grey so t you could see tree-trunks if t not in tion. As     ly    he wood.

        t at once occurred to ;Are ives on ter all?" t it     t size - but    Caspian    to     moved.

        Edmund made sure t s plad to    iigate.

        ly to till    t it oo small for Caspian and too big for Lucy. It did not run    aer ;Is t you, Edmund?”

        "Yes. ; said he.

        "Dont you kno; said t;Its me Eustace.”

        "By jove," said Edmund, "so it is. My dear chap -”

        "; said Eustad lurco fall.

        "; said Edmund, steadying ;s up? Are you ill?”

        Eustace    for so long t Edmund t ing; but at    last ;Its been gly. You dont kno its all rigalk some to meet t yet.”

        "Yes, rat; said Edmund. "e    go and sit on to see you - er - looking yourself again. You must    ty beastly time.”

        t to t do across t paler and paler and tars disappeared except for one very brighe horizon.

        "I    tell you ill I    tell t it all over,”

        said Eustace. "By t even kno ill I urned up    to tell you opped being one.”

        "Fire a; said Edmund.

        "ell, last nig beastly arm-ring    hing-”

        "Is t all right now?”

        Eustace laug laug easily off ;t is," ;and    anyone , mind you, it may    know.”

        "Go on," said Edmund, ience.

        "ell, any ted: a o t    nig t erribly afraid of it. You may t, being a dragon, I could     easily enough.

        But it    t kind of fear. I    afraid of it eating me, I    afraid of it - if you    uand. ell, it came close up to me and looked straigo my    eyes. And I s my eyes tig t    any good because it told me to follo.”

        "You mean it spoke?”

        "I dont kno you mention it, I dont t did. But it told    me all the same.

        And I kold me, so I got up and follo. And    it led me a long o tains. And t over and    round t. So at last o top of a mountain Id    never seen before and on top of tain trees and fruit and    everyt there was a well.

        "I kne er bubbling up from ttom of it: but it    bigger t eps going doo it. ter    if I    could get in t    told me I    must undress first.

        Mind you, I dont kno.

        "I    going to say t I couldnt undress because I    any    clot t dragons are snaky sort of t    their skins.

        O I, ts arted    scratcctle deeper and, instead of just scales ing off arted    peeling off beautifully, like it does after an illness, or as if I e or t

        stepped out of it. I could see it lying ty. It    lovely feeling. So I started to go doo the.

        "But just as I o put my feet into ter I looked do t as ts all rig only means I    on under one, and Ill o get out of it too. So 1 scratcain and tifully and out I stepped a it lying beside t doo the.

        "ell, exactly t to myself, o to take off? For I o batcime and got off a t like tepped out of it. But as soon as I looked at myself in ter I kne had been no    good.

        "t I dont kno spoke - "You     me undress you.”

        I    I ty nearly    desperate no lay flat doo let .

        "t tear    I t it     into my .

        And . t made me able to bear it    tuff peel off.

        You kno s like    billy-o it is suco see it ing away.”

        "I knoly ; said Edmund.

        "ell, ly stuff rig as I t Id do myself times, only t    - and t    as a peeled sc    like t muder under    Id no skin on - and to ter. It smarted like anyt only for a    moment. After t it became perfectly delicious and as soon as I started surned into a    boy again.

        Youd told you    about my oty mouldy pared    I o see them.

        "After a bit took me out and dressed me -”

        "Dressed you. ith his paws?”

        "ell, I doly remember t bit. But    on noter of fact. And t makes me t must have been a dream.”

        "No. It    a dream," said Edmund.

        "?”

        "ell, ther.”

        " do you t ; asked Eustace.

        "I t; said Edmund.

        "Aslan!" said Eustace. "Ive    name mentioned several times since    reader. And I felt - I dont kno. But I o apologize. Im afraid Ive beey    beastly.”

        "ts all rig; said Edmund. "Bet trip to Narnia. You    I raitor.”

        "ell, dont tell me about it, t; said Eustace. "But who is Aslan? Do    you know him?”

        "ell - ; said Edmund. " Lion, t often. And it may be Aslans try o.”

        brigar    see tains on t, t    ur kind screamed in ts among trees, and finally a blast on Caspians ir.

        Great ored Eustace o    t circle round t of ory.

        People    no one, least of all Eustace    any desire to go    back to t valley for more treasure.

        In a fereader, remasted, re-painted, and ored,    o sail. Before to be cut on a smootwo narrow escapes

        DRAGON ISLAND DISCOVERED BY CASPIAN X, KING OF NARNIA, Et tESIAN    rue, to say t "from t time fortace    boy". to be strictly accurate, o be a different boy. ill many days    most of t notice. the cure had begun.

        tesians arm ring e. Eustace did not    it    and offered it to Caspian and Caspian offered it to Lucy. S care about .    "Very cc; said Caspian and flung it up in tanding looking at tion. Up    t, and caugly as a , on a little proje    on to get it from beloo get    it from above. And t is ill and may ill    t world ends.
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