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The_Complete_Chronicles_of_Narnia_(volumes_1-7,_in_order_of_publication)

The_Complete_Chronicles_of_Narnia_(volumes_1-7,_in_order_of_publication)

The_Complete_Chronicles_of_Narnia_(volumes_1-7,_in_order_of_publication)

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"<strong>The</strong> boy with the wild face is Bacchus and the old one on the donkey is Silenus. Don't<br />

you remember Mr Tumnus tell<strong>in</strong>g us about them long ago?"<br />

"Yes, <strong>of</strong> course. But I say, Lu "<br />

"What?"<br />

"I wouldn't have felt safe with Bacchus and all his wild girls if we'd met them without<br />

Aslan."<br />

"I should th<strong>in</strong>k not," said Lucy.<br />

CHAPTER TWELVE<br />

SORCERY AND SUDDEN VENGEANCE<br />

MEANWHILE Trumpk<strong>in</strong> and the two boys arrived at the dark little stone archway which<br />

led <strong>in</strong>to the <strong>in</strong>side <strong>of</strong> the Mound, and two sent<strong>in</strong>el badgers (the white patches on their<br />

cheeks were all Edmund could see <strong>of</strong> them) leaped up with bared teeth and asked them <strong>in</strong><br />

snarl<strong>in</strong>g voices, "Who goes there?"<br />

"Trumpk<strong>in</strong>," said the Dwarf. "Br<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g the High K<strong>in</strong>g <strong>of</strong> <strong>Narnia</strong> out <strong>of</strong> the far past."<br />

<strong>The</strong> badgers nosed at the boys' hands. "At last," they said. "At last."<br />

"Give us a light, friends," said Trumpk<strong>in</strong>.<br />

<strong>The</strong> badgers found a torch just <strong>in</strong>side the arch and Peter lit it and handed it to Trumpk<strong>in</strong>.<br />

"<strong>The</strong> D.L.F. had better lead," he said. "We don't know our way about this place."<br />

Trumpk<strong>in</strong> took the torch and went ahead <strong>in</strong>to the dark tunnel. It was a cold, black, musty<br />

place, with an occasional bat flutter<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> the torchlight, and plenty <strong>of</strong> cobwebs. <strong>The</strong><br />

boys, who had been mostly <strong>in</strong> the open air s<strong>in</strong>ce that morn<strong>in</strong>g at the railway station, felt<br />

as if they were go<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to a trap or a prison.<br />

"I say, Peter," whispered Edmund. "Look at those carv<strong>in</strong>gs on the walls. Don't they look<br />

old? And yet we're older than that. When we were last here, they hadn't been made."<br />

"Yes," said Peter. "That makes one th<strong>in</strong>k."<br />

<strong>The</strong> Dwarf went on ahead and then turned to the right, and then to the left, and then down<br />

some steps, and then to the left aga<strong>in</strong>. <strong>The</strong>n at last they saw a light ahead - light from<br />

under a door. And now for the first time they heard voices, for they had come to the door

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