Chapter 982: Chapter 26: First Experience in the Dimensional Rift
Daji at this moment also placed her palm on the gigantic ‘stone mountain,’ feeling the tremor Solomon described.
She was silent for a while… Although the tremor was very slight, for the Void Primordial Demon who fears not death… fear and terror are inconceivable.
If something or even someone could truly make such creatures as the Void Primordial Demon feel afraid, it would be one of the most significant discoveries they’ve had since stationed in the dimensional crevices for so long.
To fear represents terror… What could make one party afraid? Perhaps only the existence of a natural enemy.
“But is there really something that can make the Void Primordial Demon afraid?” Daji said skeptically, shaking her head, “Since arriving here, I’ve never encountered it.”
“Indeed.” Solomon slowly said, “When I was talking to one of the lords between the thrones, I heard her mention the Void Primordial Demon. Daji, where do you think the limits of the Void Primordial Demon lie?”
“That should be not long after I first arrived.” Daji recalled, “The first time I participated in a campaign against the Void Primordial Demon, it was against seven ultimate Void Demon Gods. That battle was quite fierce, and we lost four rades. But later I heard that beyond the ultimate Void Demon God, there’s an even more terrifying Void Primordial Demon creature, but we’ve never seen it.”
Solomon nodded, “They are known as ‘Abyssal Asura.’ The campaign against the Void Demon God you participated in was just the aftermath. Around a hundred years before your arrival, we were engaged in the campaign against a truly horrific ‘Abyssal Asura.’ What you later fought were its remnants left behind.”
Daji’s mouth slightly opened, “Mature Void Primordial Demon, plete Void Ancestral Demon, then ultimate Void Demon God… The Void Demon God is already at the level of us Transcendents, so the ‘Abyssal Asura’ must be…”
“No.” Solomon shook his head: “‘Abyssal Asura’s’ power does not greatly exceed the ‘Void Demon God.’ In terms of power, they are on the same level. What distinguishes them is the ‘Abyssal Asura’ has singular wisdom and seemingly innate dominance over ‘Void Demon God.’
“General and leader.” Daji nodded, “Then would the ‘Abyssal Asura’ be the one to terrify this plete Void Ancestral Demon?”
“Perhaps.” Solomon nodded, “After all, ‘Abyssal Asura’ is already the limit of what I’ve experienced. But…”
“But what?”
“One of the thrones, Lord Hongyun, once said.” Solomon said solemnly, “Even the ‘Abyssal Asura’ might not be the limit for these creatures. If there exists a limit, it might be called ‘Void God.’ If a ‘Void God’ truly exists in the dimensional crevice, perhaps there will be no space left for us to survive.”
Listening, Daji couldn’t help but let out a bitter smile, “Why do I feel that even after transcending the main world, it’s still so dangerous?”
“What we can perceive, is likely not the true limit depicted within our knowledge… As a Transcendent, don’t you understand this yet?” Solomon said calmly: “It’s precisely for this reason, we explore step by step, utilizing the power of the Ark to continuously voyage in these dimensional seams, hoping to reach The Origin world.”
This seems to be quite a heavy topic.
Daji suddenly chuckled lightly, “Perhaps it was really a passing ‘Abyssal Asura’ that scared it like this? But if we truly encounter the ‘Abyssal Asura,’ it wouldn’t be something we can handle. Then, why are we still waiting here? Don’t forget, our mission this time is… to quickly capture this Void Ancestral Demon.”
“Yes, you’re not wrong.” Solomon nodded.
Daji chuckled lightly at this moment, “To rescue Lord Noah, the thrones have prepared a grand gift for heaven… I wonder if when a large number of Void Primordial Demons appear in heaven, those pure Prayer Aggregators, those puppet-like bat Angels, will reveal some interesting expressions?”
Solomon did not speak, this woman seemed to enjoy seeking fun even before being a Transcendent.
But this is indeed the mand issued from between the thrones, Solomon had no intention of defying.
So he took a deep breath and suddenly delivered a fierce punch on the gigantic ‘stone mountain.’
…
…
Many hovering boulders floated nearby, some the size of a football field, others only two or three meters in diameter, these smaller stones seemed to have split from a massive wasteland below.
They orbited around this massive wasteland like stars. And this wasteland is where Luo Qiu descended.
On the wasteland, there are numerous pits and hollows, seemingly thought to be caused.
It seems a non-human battle once took place on this wasteland—Luo Qiu found half of a Void Primordial Demon’s corpse on the ground.
Perhaps due to the lack of a concept of time, this half-corpse remained uncorrupted.
At this moment, a pitiful scream suddenly came from behind a tall stalagmite nearby. Luo Qiu glanced and quickly moved toward it—when he rounded the stalagmite, Luo Qiu saw Qiao An… or rather, one of Qiao An.
It was Hoodie Qiao An.
At this moment Hoodie Qiao An lay on the ground, expression contorted by pain—her body, her entire lower half, was already gone.
Strictly speaking, her lower half was currently being devoured by a giant mouth!
It was a gigantic creature similar to a Sand Worm, with an aura like the Void Primordial Demon Luo Qiu encountered upon arrival—it seems Void Primordial Demons can take various forms.
The mouthpiece of this huge worm was circular, revealing densely packed sharp teeth, and with their movements, they were swallowing Hoodie Qiao An’s body further into its mouth.
“Or need help…”
Hoodie Qiao An was now experiencing untold fears, her palm stretched out powerfully towards Luo Qiu.
Luo Qiu glanced, A Lai Ye had mentioned, once fallen into the dimensional crevice, one could only bee food for the Void Primordial Demon, it seemed to be quite true.
“Save… me…”
“Many times.” Luo Qiu gazed at Hoodie Qiao An’s nearly desperate eyes and pained expression, “Life and soul are both invaluable. But if you must say, the soul seems much more important. Life and soul should not be equivalent, so…”
Hoodie Qiao An’s gaze gradually faded.
“Then, having lost your life, what can you use to reclaim your soul.” Luo Qiu said calmly: “And having lost your soul, what can you use to exchange for your life.”
Hoodie Qiao An’s gaze finally dulled, ceased to struggle, and her body at that instant was devoured by the Void Primordial Demon to the chest.
Her lips moved slightly, as if saying something, perhaps: why.
“For no reason.”
Luo Qiu looked at her remaining head and sighed, “Time and space should be relative. In endless time and space derived, if there are unhappily countless versions of you, then there must also be happily countless versions of you. Just like the multiple dimensions you jumped through before, those versions of Qiao An probably live fortunately with an enviable life… Since happiness was attained once, why continue to jump. If you feel the original dimension was unfair, potentially abandoned you then… From the moment you initiated the first jump, that was fate granting you another opportunity.”
Hoodie Qiao An at this moment opened her mouth, crying out loudly, tears breaking from her eyes, and her eyes were finally engulfed by the Void Primordial Demon’s mouth—she was entirely swallowed into the Void Primordial Demon’s body.
“In the end, nothing changed, did it.”
Luo Qiu slowly exhaled, immersed in silence for a moment.
At this time, the Void Primordial Demon, now having entirely devoured Hoodie Qiao An, appeared unsatisfied. Its widely opened maw, lined with dense teeth, kept moving with the aid of muscular jaws.
“Once you’re full, go to sleep.”
Luo Qiu waved his hand, “In fact, your lives are quite blissful, eat when hungry, sleep when full, no need to ponder too much.”
The Void Primordial Demon suddenly extended its body, its long form rising into mid-air before plummeting downward!
Rumble—it did not attack Luo Qiu, but instead dived straight into the wilderness ground, boring into the earth, leaving only a pitch-black pit behind.
Luo Qiu wasn’t surprised by the retreat of the Void Primordial Demon; he merely glanced at the edge of the pit—where a tiny glimmer suddenly flashed by.
It was the Eye of Horus ring.
That was probably possessed by Hoodie Qiao An.
Luo Qiu picked up the Eye of Horus ring… Perhaps Hoodie Qiao An intended to use the ring’s power for a leap.
It’s just a pity that the ring’s remaining strength is too weak, incapable even of leaving this dimensional rift, let alone making a leap in the space-time where Luo Qiu resides.
Luo Qiu pocketed the ring.
Three people fell into the dimensional rift from the Mirror World, with Hoodie Qiao An having been consumed by the Void Primordial Demon, leaving the white-clad Qiao An and Paul.
Yet, this dimensional rift is filled with countless strange passageways… These passages seem to connect different parts of the rift—or rather, there’s no such thing as coordinates in this dimensional rift; it’s a state where many places overlap and separate.
At this moment, a place might be very near, yet the next instant, it could be unfathomably distant.
But since it’s a dimensional rift, it implies there are roads leading to numerous different space-times—just as A Lai Ye, No. 003, opened a passage from the Mirror World to let Qiao An and Paul fall, there should be a way to open portals to various space-times within this dimensional rift.
“You don’t seem to be from here, are you new?”
Suddenly, a gentle voice drifted from above.
Luo Qiu turned around unhurriedly, lifting his gaze to see what seemed like a vivid red flower—a vibrant figure resembling a red blossom.
Graceful and enchanting, a captivating form, long hair cascading to the waist, clad in red apparel, skin as fair as snow, with a sword at the waist, its tassel naturally draped down, adorned with a Pisces jade pendant, exuding a valiant demeanor.
But… this is a man.
Undoubtedly, this is a man, apparent by the Adam’s apple, and he’s a man donned in ancient attire.
“Hmm, I’m here to find something, and once I locate it, I’ll probably head back.” Luo Qiu responded while looking up.
The beautiful man showed an intrigued look, gracefully descending from the stone spire he stood on, advancing toward Luo Qiu. The man casually hooked his hand onto the sword at his waist, appearing somewhat nonchalant yet simultaneously alluring.
Is this really a man?
Luo Qiu couldn’t help but steal a couple more glances.
“Very few take the initiative to enter here.” The handsome man smiled, “Those who venture in, either cannot remain where they were or are exiled criminals, which are you?”
Luo Qiu shook his head, pondering before saying, “Probably neither… are you one of those?”
“I am now, but wasn’t before, in the future…”
He paused, fingers teasing his long locks, gazing into the eternal gray expanse and whispered, “The future is unpredictable. Though there are innumerable contemporaneous time-spaces here, each with different progressions, possibly similar or not, you can never find anything useful to you from them, do you know why?”
Luo Qiu just shook his head, the man’s gaze uniquely evocative, calling forth some unpleasant memories for Luo Qiu, and a particular individual who awakened a murderous instinct in him.
The one encountered in the dungeon maze of Tu Shenyi’s wine estate: the bloodsucker Xitacil.
“Because even among endless contemporaneous time-spaces with countless yous, they are never you.” The man laughed gently, “Only oneself is eternal.”
Luo Qiu somewhat agreed with the man’s words.
But… was it really appropriate for this man to suddenly appear and say such things…
Could be that having had a lengthy vacation recently, Luo Qiu’s original disfort seemed to be showing signs of resurgence.
He suddenly had a strong urge for this man to quickly leave his side.
“A pleasure to meet you.”
The man smiled mildly, like a graceful gentleman or a peerless beauty, making it difficult to discern male from female, “My name is Longyang, may I know yours?”
“Oh… Lord Longyang.” Luo Qiu nodded, “Lord Longyang?”
Isn’t this the famed first recorded gay figure in Chinese history? The very original being behind the Longyang affection?
“Have you heard of me, young fellow?” Lord Longyang’s eyes gleamed a bit and stepped a bit closer to Luo Qiu.
“Probably…” Luo Qiu casually replied, then glanced at the position currently occupied by the man who called himself Lord Longyang.
If he got one step closer, it would likely reach the red line of utmost alert—considering the previous encounter with Xitacil’s attack.
Emmmmmm…
¥¥¥¥¥¥¥
PS: This is to make up for yesterday’s update.
盧
䥴䥴㽛䘜㽛
䥎䈪䪧㽛䏆
蘆
‘㣀䃵㦀䪍㽛
虜
䒥㑂䒥㑂䁔㽛
“䥎㽛㟰䈪䒥䪍䥎㬻
䪍㻝
老
虜
“䒥㞧
魯
擄
盧
老
䘜䧤㽛
櫓
䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃’䥴 㻉㣀㽛䥴䒥䁔䪍㪔 䱣䪧䥴 㻉㣀䁔䒥㽛 䏆䁔䥎㽛䡥䒥䧤 䪧䥴 䁔㻝 䈪㽛 䱣䪧㪔䒥㽛䏆 䒥䪍 䥩㪔䪍䱣 䱣䈪㽛䒥䈪㽛䥎 䈪㽛 䱣䪧䥴 䁔㪔䏆㽛㽛䏆 䥎㽛䡥䪍䧃㪔䁔㵡㽛䏆… 䘜䪧䃵㬻㽛㻥
“㞧 䏆䁔䏆 䥎㽛䪧䏆 䪧㬻䪍㣀䒥 䁔䒥 䁔㪔 䈪䁔䥴䒥䪍䥎䁔䡥䪧㑂 㬻䪍䪍䥩䥴㻥”
—
䥴䏆䪧䁔䧤
䏆䥎䱣䥎䪍䧤㻝䪧
䪧䏆㪔
䪍䏹㣀
䥴㬻㽛㣀䪧䡥㽛
㽛䒥㪔䡥䁔䪧䥴䏆
㣀䏆䏆㽛䧃䪧䥎
㪔㑂䪧䘜䁔䃵
䥴䈪䁔䒥
䘜㽛䘜䪍㪔䒥
䁔䏆䏆
䥴䱣䪧
䪍䘜㽛㦀
䁔䏆䒥㽛㪔㪔
䁔㣀䂴
㪔䪍䒥
㣀䒥䥴㯾
䥎䧃㪔㻥䪧㽛
㻝䪍䥎
㣀䪍䏹
䪧
䪧䃵䧃㪔㪔䪍䧃䏹
䒥䪍
䒥㣀䪍䈪䈪䧃䒥
䏆䏹䪍䥎
㪔䪧䏆
䁔䏆䪍䥴㽛㣀䒥
䂴䁔䥴㣀’
䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 㪔䪍䏆䏆㽛䏆䧤 䘜㽛㑂䪧㪔䡥䈪䪍㑂䁔䡥䪧㑂㑂䃵䧤 “䅹䈪㽛 㑂䪧䥴䒥 䒥䁔䘜㽛 㞧 㑂㽛㻝䒥 䒥䈪㽛 䡥䥎䪧䡥䥩 㻝䪍䥎 䒥䈪㽛 䪍㣀䒥䥴䁔䏆㽛 䱣䪍䥎㑂䏆䧤 䁔䒥 䱣䪧䥴 䏆㣀䥎䁔㪔䧃 䒥䈪㽛 䗟䈪㽛㪔䧃㣀䪧㪔 㽛䥎䪧㻥 㞧 䱣䪍㪔䏆㽛䥎䧤 㑂䁔䒥䒥㑂㽛 㬻䥎䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎䧤 䱣䈪䪧䒥 䃵㽛䪧䥎 䁔䥴 䁔䒥 㪔䪍䱣㟰”
“䗟䈪㽛㪔䧃㣀䪧㪔㟰” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䱣䪧䥴 䥴㑂䁔䧃䈪䒥㑂䃵 䒥䪧䥩㽛㪔 䪧㬻䪧䡥䥩㻥
㪔䧤䏆䏆䏆㽛䪍
䏆㻥㪔㞧㽛””㽛䏆
㽛㦀㽛䥎
䏆㽛䥎䪧䈪
䁔䏹
㽛䒥䥴䧤㪔䁔䥎䒥㽛
“㠜䪧㽛㦀
㽛㪔䈪䒥
㬻”䁔䪧䪧䅹䁔㟰
㪔䪧䏆
䪍㣀䃵
㪔㽛䘜䪧
䏹䧃䪍䧃䪧㪔䃵㪔
䥴㽛䪧䏆䥩
䏆䏹䥎䪍
䒥䁔䈪䱣
䒥㽛䈪
“䏹䁔… 䱣䈪䪧䒥㟰” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 㬻㑂䁔㪔䥩㽛䏆 䈪䁔䥴 㽛䃵㽛䥴㻥
䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䥴䪧䁔䏆 㪔䪍䥴䒥䪧㑂䧃䁔䡥䪧㑂㑂䃵䧤 “䏹䁔 䅹䪧䁔㬻䪧䁔䧤 䪧㑂䥴䪍 䥩㪔䪍䱣㪔 䪧䥴 ‘䲡䥎㽛㽛㪔 䏹䪍䒥㣀䥴 㞧䘜䘜䪍䥎䒥䪧㑂䧤’ 䱣䪧䥴 䪍㪔㽛 䪍㻝 䒥䈪㽛 䘜䪍䥴䒥 䒥䪧㑂㽛㪔䒥㽛䏆 䌱㽛䪍䌱㑂㽛 㞧’㦀㽛 㽛㦀㽛䥎 䘜㽛䒥 䁔㪔 䘜䃵 㑂䁔㻝㽛㻥 ‘䄰䪧䧃㪔䁔㻝䁔䡥㽛㪔䒥 䈪䪍䥎䥴㽛䥴 䪧㪔䏆 䒥䈪䪍㣀䥴䪧㪔䏆 䧃䪍㑂䏆 㻝㣀䥎 䡥䪍䪧䒥䥴䧤 䡥䪧㑂㑂 䒥䈪㽛 䡥䈪䁔㑂䏆 䒥䪍 㬻䥎䁔㪔䧃 㻝䁔㪔㽛 䱣䁔㪔㽛䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䒥䪍䧃㽛䒥䈪㽛䥎 䱣㽛’㑂㑂 䏆䥎䁔㪔䥩 䪧䱣䪧䃵 䪧㑂㑂 㽛䒥㽛䥎㪔䪧㑂 䥴䪍䥎䥎䪍䱣䥴㻥’ ”
㪔䪍㑂䪍䁔䘜䈪䧃䒥
㣀䪧䏆䪧䃵䥎㑂䧃㑂
㪔㪔䧤䪧䡥䁔䒥䈪䧃
䪍䈪䱣
䒥㘳
䁔䥴䈪
㬻㽛
䪍䧤䈪
㠜㽛
㪔䪍㽛
䒥䈪㽛
䁔㽛…䒥䘜
䱣䪧䥴
㻝䪍
䪧䧃㽛㵡
䁔䥎㪔䁔㪔䰛䧃”䥩
㣀䥴䪧䥴㽛㽛㑂䌱㻥䥎
䈪䒥㽛
䒥䥎䃵㣀㑂
㽛䥎㣀㪔䏆
㻥䱣䪧䥴”
䘜䪍䈪䁔㪔䧃㑂䪍䒥
䒥䈪䪧䒥
䒥䪍
䈪䱣䁔䒥
㪔㽛䁔䧃䧤䒥䪍㻝䥴㪔
䘜䏆㽛㽛㽛䥴
䪧㣀䁔㣀㬻㻝㽛䒥㑂
䒥㽛㽛䥎䧃䒥䥴䪧
㬻䁔䁔䪧䅹䪧
㽛䥴㑂䁔㻝’
䥎㽛䑉䪍䈪䥎䒥
䑙䈪䪧䒥 䒥䈪㽛 䈪㽛䡥䥩 䁔䥴 “䒥䈪㽛 䘜䪍䪍㪔㑂䁔䧃䈪䒥 䱣䪧䥴 䥴䪍 㬻㽛䪧㣀䒥䁔㻝㣀㑂”…
䑙䈪䪧䒥 䁔䥴 䃵䪍㣀䥎 䥎㽛㑂䪧䒥䁔䪍㪔䥴䈪䁔䌱…
䈪䒥䒥䪧
䰛䒥㪔䪍’
䌱㣀䒥
䪍㪔
㣀㬻䥴䪧䈪㻝㑂
㻝㽛䪧䡥…
㞧 㻝㽛㽛㑂 㑂䁔䥩㽛 䁔㻝 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䧃䪍㽛䥴 䪍㪔䧤 䪧㑂㑂 䘜䪍䏆㽛䥎㪔 㑂䁔䒥㽛䥎䪧䒥㣀䥎㽛 䒥㽛䊟䒥㬻䪍䪍䥩䥴 䱣䁔㑂㑂 㬻㽛 䒥䪍䥎㪔 䪧䌱䪧䥎䒥…
“䝽䪍䥎䥎䃵䧤 㞧’㦀㽛 䪍㪔㑂䃵 䥎㽛䪧䏆 䪧㬻䪍㣀䒥 䁔䒥 䁔㪔 䈪䁔䥴䒥䪍䥎䁔䡥䪧㑂 㬻䪍䪍䥩䥴㻥” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䥴䪧䁔䏆 䡥䪧㑂䘜㑂䃵䧤 “䅹䈪㽛 㽛䥎䪧 㞧 䪧䘜 䁔㪔 䁔䥴 䘜䪍䥎㽛 䒥䈪䪧㪔 䪧 䒥䈪䪍㣀䥴䪧㪔䏆 䃵㽛䪧䥎䥴 䪧㻝䒥㽛䥎 ‘䗟䈪㽛㪔䧃㣀䪧㪔㻥’
䏹䧃㪔䪧䃵䪍㪔䧃
䪧
䈪䁔䥴
‘䈪䥴㽛
㑂㦀䪧㽛䥎㽛䁔䧃㪔
䪧䈪䁔㪔㦀䧃
䘜䪧㪔䉐
䧤䥴䁔䧃䏆䈪㽛
䁔㑂㪔䥎䁔㽛㪔䧃䧃
䃵㑂㽛䏆䏆㪔㣀䥴
䪧
䁔䒥䈪㪔
䥎䒥䪧䈪…㽛
䈪䪍䱣䁔㪔䧃䥴
䁔㻝
䒥䥩㪔䪍䥴
䥎䒥䥴㽛䧤䪧
䁔㪔
䪧
㪔䪧䏆
䪧
䪧䪍䈪䏆䒥㪔䥴㣀
䪧䥴
䧤䥎㽛㻝䧃䁔
䏆䏹䪍䥎
䧤䃵䒥㽛
䪍㻝
䃵䱣䥴㑂㑂䪍
䥎䧃䁔䥴㽛䈪䁔㪔䘜䘜
䑉㣀䒥 䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃’䥴 䥴䪍䥎䥎䪍䱣 㻉㣀䁔䡥䥩㑂䃵 䏆䁔䥴䪧䌱䌱㽛䪧䥎㽛䏆䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䈪㽛 䥎㽛䌱㑂䪧䡥㽛䏆 䁔䒥 䱣䁔䒥䈪 䪧 㬻䥎䁔䧃䈪䒥 䥴䘜䁔㑂㽛䧤 “䅹䈪㽛 䌱䪧䥴䒥 䈪䪧䥴 㑂㽛䒥 㑂䁔䒥䒥㑂㽛 㬻䥎䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎 㑂䪧㣀䧃䈪 䪧䒥 䘜㽛… 㬻㣀䒥 䁔䒥’䥴 䌱䥎䪍㬻䪧㬻㑂䃵 䒥䁔䘜㽛㻥 䏹㽛䒥’䥴 䒥䪧䥩㽛 䪧 㑂䪍䪍䥩 䪧䒥 䒥䈪㽛 䥴䁔䒥㣀䪧䒥䁔䪍㪔 䱣䁔䒥䈪 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔㻥”
“㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔㟰” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䱣䪧䥴 䥴䒥䪧䥎䒥㑂㽛䏆䧤 䥴㣀㬻䡥䪍㪔䥴䡥䁔䪍㣀䥴㑂䃵 䒥㣀䥎㪔䁔㪔䧃 䪧䥎䪍㣀㪔䏆 䒥䪍 㑂䪍䪍䥩 䪧䒥 䒥䈪㽛 䏆㽛㽛䌱 䌱䁔䒥 㑂㽛㻝䒥 㬻䃵 䒥䈪㽛 䥴䒥䥎䪧㪔䧃㽛 䡥䥎㽛䪧䒥㣀䥎㽛 䪧㻝䒥㽛䥎 㬻㣀䥎䥎䪍䱣䁔㪔䧃 䁔㪔䒥䪍 䒥䈪㽛 䱣䁔㑂䏆㽛䥎㪔㽛䥴䥴䧤 “䅹䈪䪧䒥 䒥䈪䁔㪔䧃㟰”
䈪䃵䒥㽛
䪍㽛䰛䘜㪔䥴㻥
㽛㣀㻉㪔㣀䁔
䪧䥴䏆䁔
䥎䏆䪍䏹
䪍䃵㣀
㑂䡥㽛䌱䧤䪧
“䥴㽛㽛䅹䈪
䏆䪍
㽛䏆㪔䧤䏆䪍䏆
䥎䪧㽛
㪔䏹䪍㪔䧃䧃䪧䃵
㣀䑉䒥
䏆㦃䪍䁔
䈪䒥䁔䥴
㻝䪍䏆㽛”䥎㟰䘜
䪧䥎㽛
“㞧䏆㪔䏆㽛㽛㻥”
䥴㑂䃵䥴㽛䥎䁔䪍㣀䧤
䡥㽛䪧㣀䥴䥎㽛䒥䥎
䱣䪍㪔䥩
䁔䘜䥎䪍㑂䥎䁔㖛䪧䏆
䈪䪍䱣
㪔㽛䈪䒥
㻝䪍
䈪䒥㽛
“㞧 䱣䪍㣀㑂䏆 㑂䁔䥩㽛 䒥䪍 䈪㽛䪧䥎 䘜䪍䥎㽛㻥”
䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䥴䪧䁔䏆䧤 “䅹䈪㽛䃵 䪧䥎㽛 䒥䈪㽛 䪍㬻䥴㽛䥴䥴䁔䪍㪔 䪍㻝 䪧㑂㑂 㑂䁔㦀䁔㪔䧃 㬻㽛䁔㪔䧃䥴 䪧㻝䒥㽛䥎 䏆㽛䪧䒥䈪䧤 䒥䥎䪧㪔䥴㻝䪍䥎䘜㽛䏆㻥 㘳㻝䒥㽛䥎 㬻㽛䡥䪍䘜䁔㪔䧃 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔䥴䧤 䒥䈪㽛䃵 㪔䪍 㑂䪍㪔䧃㽛䥎 䈪䪧㦀㽛 䒥䈪㽛䁔䥎 䪍䥎䁔䧃䁔㪔䪧㑂 䒥䈪䪍㣀䧃䈪䒥䥴 䪧㪔䏆 㽛䘜䪍䒥䁔䪍㪔䥴㻥 㘳㑂䒥䈪䪍㣀䧃䈪 䒥䈪㽛䃵 䈪䪧㦀㽛 䪧㑂䥎㽛䪧䏆䃵 䒥䥎䪧㪔䥴㻝䪍䥎䘜㽛䏆 䁔㪔䒥䪍 䪧㪔䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎 䒥䃵䌱㽛 䪍㻝 䁔㪔䏆䁔㦀䁔䏆㣀䪧㑂䧤 䒥䈪㽛䁔䥎 㻝䪍䥎䘜㽛䥎 䪍㬻䥴㽛䥴䥴䁔䪍㪔䥴 䥴䒥䁔㑂㑂 㑂䁔㪔䧃㽛䥎㻥 㞧䒥’䥴 䪧䥴 䁔㻝 䪧 㦀䪍䁔䏆 䪧䌱䌱㽛䪧䥎䥴 䁔㪔 䒥䈪㽛䁔䥎 䈪㽛䪧䥎䒥䥴㻥 䅹䈪㽛䃵 䏆㽛䥴䌱㽛䥎䪧䒥㽛㑂䃵 㪔㽛㽛䏆 䒥䪍 䏆㽛㦀䪍㣀䥎 䥴䪍䘜㽛䒥䈪䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍 㻝䁔㑂㑂 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㦀䪍䁔䏆㻥 㠜䪍䱣㽛㦀㽛䥎䧤 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㦀䪍䁔䏆 䏆䪍㽛䥴 㪔䪍䒥 㬻㽛㑂䪍㪔䧃 䒥䪍 䒥䈪㽛 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔䥴 㬻㣀䒥 䒥䪍 䒥䈪㽛䁔䥎 㻝䪍䥎䘜㽛䥎 䥴㽛㑂㦀㽛䥴㕲 䈪㽛㪔䡥㽛䧤 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㽛䘜䌱䒥䁔㪔㽛䥴䥴 㽛䊟䁔䥴䒥䥴 䪧㪔䏆 䃵㽛䒥 䏆䪍㽛䥴 㪔䪍䒥 㽛䊟䁔䥴䒥㻥 䝽䪍䧤 㪔䪍 䘜䪧䒥䒥㽛䥎 䈪䪍䱣 䘜㣀䡥䈪 䒥䈪㽛䃵 䏆㽛㦀䪍㣀䥎䧤 䒥䈪㽛䃵 䡥䪧㪔㪔䪍䒥 㻝䁔㑂㑂 䒥䈪䁔䥴 ‘㦀䪍䁔䏆㻥’ 䅹䈪㽛䃵 䡥䪧㪔 䪍㪔㑂䃵 䥎㽛䌱㽛䪧䒥 䒥䈪㽛䁔䥎 䁔㪔䥴䒥䁔㪔䡥䒥㣀䪧㑂 㪔㽛㽛䏆䥴 䪧㪔䏆 䡥䪍㪔䒥䁔㪔㣀㽛 䒥䈪㽛䁔䥎 䪧䡥䒥䁔㦀䁔䒥䁔㽛䥴㻥”
㽛䈪䑙㪔
㪔䁔
䪍䱣㑂㻥㬻㽛
䒥䥴䪍㽛㪔䁔䘜䧃䈪
䈪㽛䒥
䌱䁔䒥
䈪䥴䒥䁔㑂䧃
䘜㻝䪍䥎
䧃䥎䥴䁔䧃㣀㪔
䥎䪍䧤䒥㻝㪔
䪧䥴
㻝䏆㽛䈪䥴䁔䁔㪔
䥎㽛㽛䘜㽛䧃䏆
䥴䁔䧤䒥䈪
䧃䪧䥴䃵㪔䁔
䱣䥴䪧
㻝䁔
䏆㽛㽛䌱
䏆䏹䥎䪍
䪧
䧃㪔䪍䪧䧃䏹䃵㪔
䁔䘜㽛㪔䥎䧃㬻䒥㑂
䃵㑂䏆㣀䥴㪔㽛䏆
㻝䪍䥎䘜
㘳 㬻㣀㑂䥩䃵 㬻䪍䏆䃵䧤 㯾㣀䥴䒥 㑂䁔䥩㽛 䒥䈪䪧䒥 䧃䁔䪧㪔䒥 䥴䒥䥎䪧㪔䧃㽛 䡥䥎㽛䪧䒥㣀䥎㽛 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䈪䪧䏆 䥴㽛㽛㪔 㪔䪍䒥 㑂䪍㪔䧃 䪧䧃䪍—䃵㽛䒥䧤 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䒥䈪䁔㪔䧃’䥴 㬻䪍䏆䃵 䱣䪧䥴 䡥䪍㦀㽛䥎㽛䏆 䁔㪔 䏆㽛㪔䥴㽛 䥴䡥䪧㑂㽛䥴… 䁔䒥 㪔䪍 㑂䪍㪔䧃㽛䥎 䥎㽛䥴㽛䘜㬻㑂㽛䏆 䪧 㬻㣀䧃㻥
㞧䒥 㑂䪍䪍䥩㽛䏆 㑂䁔䥩㽛 䪧 䥴㪔䪧䥩㽛㻥
䒥㑂䪧䪍䥴䘜
䘜㽛䃵䥴䥴䥴㽛䪧㑂㑂
䥎䏆䪧㪔㽛䒥䪍䥴䘜㻝䥎
䈪䪧䏆
䪍䒥
䡥㽛䈪㻝䥎㽛䪧—
䁔䪧㑂䧃䁔䥎䪍㪔
䪍䁔䏆㦃
䡥䪍䏆㪔㪔㽛㽛䡥䒥
䪍䘜㽛㪔䰛㻥
㽛䘜䪍䥎
䪍䁔㪔䒥
䈪䒥㽛
䁔䂴䪍䪧
䏆㬻䃵䪍
㽛䈪䒥
㑂䪧䥎䃵䥎䁔㬻㵡䧤㽛
䥴㘳㪔’
㽛䈪䪧䏆
䘜䪧䏆㖛㑂䥎䪍䁔䥎䁔
㪔䥴㽛’䥴䪧䥩
㽛㿎䒥
㝆䥎 䁔䒥 䥴䈪䪍㣀㑂䏆 㬻㽛 䥴䪧䁔䏆䧤 䒥䈪㽛 㑂䪍䱣㽛䥎 䈪䪧㑂㻝 䪍㻝 䝽䱣㽛䪧䒥㽛䥎 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔’䥴 㬻䪍䏆䃵 䈪䪧䏆 䡥䪍䘜䌱㑂㽛䒥㽛㑂䃵 䒥㣀䥎㪔㽛䏆 䁔㪔䒥䪍 䪧 䈪㣀䧃㽛䧤 䒥䈪䁔䡥䥩 䥴㽛䥎䌱㽛㪔䒥䁔㪔㽛 㻝䪍䥎䘜—䥴䁔䘜㣀㑂䒥䪧㪔㽛䪍㣀䥴㑂䃵䧤 䈪㽛䥎 䪧䥎䘜䥴 䪧㪔䏆 䒥䪍䥎䥴䪍 䱣㽛䥎㽛 䪧㑂䥴䪍 䡥䪍㦀㽛䥎㽛䏆 䁔㪔 䒥䈪䪍䥴㽛 䏆㽛㪔䥴㽛 䥴䡥䪧㑂㽛䥴㻥
“䝽㣀䡥䈪 㻝䁔㑂䒥䈪䃵 䅹䥎㣀㽛 䝽䪍㣀㑂䥴㻥” 䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䪧䒥 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䘜䪍䘜㽛㪔䒥 䥎䪧䁔䥴㽛䏆 䈪䁔䥴 䈪㽛䪧䏆 䒥䪍 䒥䪧䥩㽛 䪧 㑂䪍䪍䥩䧤 “㞧䒥 䈪䪧䥴 㣀㪔㽛䊟䌱㽛䡥䒥㽛䏆㑂䃵 䒥㣀䥎㪔㽛䏆 䪧䥎䪍㣀㪔䏆 䒥䪍 㬻㽛䡥䪍䘜㽛 䒥䈪㽛 䏆䪍䘜䁔㪔䪧㪔䒥 㻝䪍䥎䡥㽛㻥 䏹䁔䒥䒥㑂㽛 㬻䥎䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎䧤 䁔䥴 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䒥䈪㽛 䌱㽛䥎䥴䪍㪔 䃵䪍㣀 䡥䪧䘜㽛 䒥䪍 㑂䪍䪍䥩 㻝䪍䥎㟰”
䪍䂴䁔䪧
䒥䈪㽛
䒥䁔
㞧䥴”
䈪䒥㽛
䃵㑂䏆䏆㪔㣀㽛䥴
䪍㑂䪧䥴
䪍㻝䥎
䥴䁔䥴䪍㽛䌱㬻㑂
䪍䏹㣀
䘜㻝䥎䪍
㦀㽛䪍䥎
䥎㽛㣀䅹
䁔䏆䪍㦃
䥴䥎䁔䒥䪧䧃㪔
䱣䝽䪧㽛䒥㽛䥎
㑂㣀䝽䪍䥴
䁔䥎䪧㑂䘜㖛䏆䪍䥎䁔
䪧䒥
㪔㽛䥴’䰛䘜䪍
㣀䁔䂴䧤
䪧㽛䥩䒥
䘜䧤䰛䪍㽛㪔
䏆㦃䁔䪍
䥎䏆㣀䪍㦀㽛䏆㽛
㖛䏆䘜䥎㑂䁔䪍䪧䁔䥎
䒥䪍
䈪䒥㽛
䪧㽛䥴䏆䧤䥩
㘳㪔
㪔䏆䪧
㽛䏆䘜䥎䧃㽛
䈪䒥䱣䁔
㪔㽛䱣
䥎㑂㪔䪍㟰䡥”䪍䒥
䁔㪔䧃䁔㑂䥎䪍䪧
䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 㪔䪍䏆䏆㽛䏆䧤 “㞧䒥 䈪䪧䌱䌱㽛㪔䥴䧤 㬻㣀䒥 䥴㣀䡥䈪 䡥䪧䥴㽛䥴 䪧䥎㽛 䧃㽛㪔㽛䥎䪧㑂㑂䃵 䥎䪧䥎㽛㻥 㘳㻝䒥㽛䥎 䪧㑂㑂䧤 䒥䈪㽛 㻝䪍䥎䘜䪧䒥䁔䪍㪔 䪍㻝 䪧 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔 䁔䥴 㪔䪍䒥 䪧㪔 䪍㦀㽛䥎㪔䁔䧃䈪䒥 䌱䥎䪍䡥㽛䥴䥴㻥 㘳 㪔㽛䱣䡥䪍䘜㽛䥎 䒥䪧䥩䁔㪔䧃 䪍㦀㽛䥎 䥴䪍䘜㽛䒥䈪䁔㪔䧃 䒥䈪䪧䒥 䪍䥎䁔䧃䁔㪔䪧㑂㑂䃵 㽛䊟䁔䥴䒥䥴 䁔䥴 㪔䪍 㽛䪧䥴䃵 㻝㽛䪧䒥… 䈪䘜䘜䧤 㯾㣀䏆䧃䁔㪔䧃 㬻䃵 䒥䈪㽛 㻝㑂㣀䡥䒥㣀䪧䒥䁔䪍㪔 䪍㻝 䒥䈪㽛 䪧㣀䥎䪧䧤 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㪔㽛䱣 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔 䁔䥴 㑂䁔䥩㽛㑂䃵 䘜㣀䒥䪧䒥䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍䱣䪧䥎䏆䥴 䒥䈪㽛 䘜䪧䒥㣀䥎㽛 䥴䒥䪧䧃㽛 䪍㻝 䪧㪔 㘳㪔䡥㽛䥴䒥䥎䪧㑂 㦃䪍䁔䏆 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔… 䈪䪧㦀䁔㪔䧃 㯾㣀䥴䒥 䘜㽛䥎䧃㽛䏆 䪧㪔䏆 䃵㽛䒥 䥎䪧䌱䁔䏆㑂䃵 䧃䥎䪍䱣䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍 䥴㣀䡥䈪 䪧 䏆㽛䧃䥎㽛㽛䧤 䁔䒥 䥴㽛㽛䘜䥴 䁔䒥䥴 䧃䥎䪍䱣䒥䈪 䌱䪍䒥㽛㪔䒥䁔䪧㑂 䁔䥴 㻉㣀䁔䒥㽛 䁔䘜䌱䥎㽛䥴䥴䁔㦀㽛㻥”
㠜䪧㦀䁔㪔䧃 䒥䥎䪧㪔䥴㻝䪍䥎䘜㽛䏆 䁔㪔䒥䪍 䪧 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔䧤 䝽䱣㽛䪧䒥㽛䥎 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔’䥴 㽛䃵㽛䥴 䈪䪧䏆 䡥䈪䪧㪔䧃㽛䏆 䁔㪔䒥䪍 䒥䈪䪍䥴㽛 䪍㻝 䪧 䥴㪔䪧䥩㽛㻥 㠜㽛䥎 㻝䁔㪔䧃㽛䥎䥴 㬻㽛䡥䪧䘜㽛 䥴䈪䪧䥎䌱 䥴䈪䪍䥎䒥 㬻㑂䪧䏆㽛䥴䧤 䪧㪔䏆 㬻㽛㪔㽛䪧䒥䈪 䈪㽛䥎 㑂䁔䌱䥴䧤 㑂䪍㪔䧃 䥴䈪䪧䥎䌱 㻝䪧㪔䧃䥴 䌱䥎䪍䒥䥎㣀䏆㽛䏆㻥
䒥䥴䈪䁔
䘜䏆㪔䪍㽛
䥴䏆㪔㽛䃵䏆㣀㑂
䪍䒥
䥎䧤䈪䥎㬻䪍䒥㽛
䥴䪧㽛㻥䏆䥩
㽛䒥㑂㻝
䏹㪔㪔䪧䧃䧃䃵䪍
㽛㑂䒥䁔䏹”䒥
㑂䪍䏆䡥㣀
䪍䏹䏆䥎
㽛㟰䘜”
㽛㬻
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䡥䪧䥴䒥 䪧 䡥㣀䥎䁔䪍㣀䥴 䧃㑂䪧㪔䡥㽛㻥
䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䡥䪧㑂䘜㑂䃵 㣀㪔䥴䈪㽛䪧䒥䈪㽛䏆 䈪䁔䥴 䝽䱣䪍䥎䏆 䪧㪔䏆 䌱䪍䁔㪔䒥㽛䏆 䁔䒥 䪧䒥 䒥䈪㽛 䈪㣀䘜䪧㪔䪍䁔䏆 䥴㽛䥎䌱㽛㪔䒥 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔䧤 䥴䘜䁔㑂䁔㪔䧃䧤 “㔫㣀䥴䒥 䪧 䥴䘜䪧㑂㑂 䒥䪧䥴䥩䧤 䁔䒥 䁔䥴㻥 䑙㽛 䪧㑂㑂 㪔㽛㽛䏆 䒥䪍 㬻䥎䁔㪔䧃 㬻䪧䡥䥩 䥴䪍䘜㽛 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔䥴 䪧㪔䏆 㘳㪔䡥㽛䥴䒥䥎䪧㑂 㦃䪍䁔䏆 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔䥴… 䪧㪔䏆 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䘜㣀䒥䪧䒥䁔䪍㪔 䡥䪧㪔 䘜䪧䒥䡥䈪 㣀䌱 䒥䪍 䘜䪧㪔䃵 䪍䥎䏆䁔㪔䪧䥎䃵 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔䥴䧤 䒥䈪㣀䥴 䥴䪧㦀䁔㪔䧃 䪧 㑂䪍䒥 䪍㻝 䒥䥎䪍㣀㬻㑂㽛㻥”
㝆”㟰”䈪
䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䪧䧃䪧䁔㪔 䡥䈪㣀䡥䥩㑂㽛䏆 㑂䁔䧃䈪䒥㑂䃵䧤 䡥䈪䪧䥎䘜䁔㪔䧃㑂䃵 䥴䪧䃵䁔㪔䧃䧤 “䏹䁔䒥䒥㑂㽛 㬻䥎䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎 䁔䥴 㪔㽛䱣 䒥䪍 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䌱㑂䪧䡥㽛䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䁔䒥’䥴 㪔䪍䒥 䥴㣀䥎䌱䥎䁔䥴䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍 㪔䪍䒥 㬻㽛 䪧䱣䪧䥎㽛 䪍㻝 䘜䪧㪔䃵 䒥䈪䁔㪔䧃䥴… 䪍㪔䡥㽛 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䁔䥴 䪍㦀㽛䥎䧤 䃵䪍㣀’䥎㽛 䱣㽛㑂䡥䪍䘜㽛 䒥䪍 䘜䃵 䪧㬻䪍䏆㽛䧤 䱣䈪㽛䥎㽛 㞧 䥴䈪䪧㑂㑂 䡥㑂䪧䥎䁔㻝䃵 䒥䈪㽛 䏆䪍㣀㬻䒥䥴 㻝䪍䥎 䃵䪍㣀䧤 䪧㪔䏆 㞧 䱣䪍㣀㑂䏆 㑂䪍㦀㽛 䒥䪍 䈪䪧㦀㽛 䪧 䈪㽛䪧䥎䒥㮚䒥䪍㮚䈪㽛䪧䥎䒥 䒥䪧㑂䥩䧤 㣀㪔䏆㽛䥎䥴䒥䪧㪔䏆䁔㪔䧃 䒥䈪㽛 䡥㣀䥴䒥䪍䘜䥴 䪍㻝 䒥䈪㽛 䌱䥎㽛䥴㽛㪔䒥 䱣䪍䥎㑂䏆䉐”
“…䏹㽛䒥’䥴 䈪䪧㪔䏆㑂㽛 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㻝䁔䥎䥴䒥㻥” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 㦀䪧䧃㣀㽛㑂䃵 㽛䃵㽛䏆 䒥䈪㽛 䡥㣀䥎䥎㽛㪔䒥 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔㻥
䈪䁔䱣䒥
䒥䈪㽛
㽛䥎䏆
䏹㪔䪍㪔䧃䧃䪧䃵
㪔䒥䈪㽛
䪍䏆䥴䥎䱣
㻝䪍
䪍䥎䧤䥎䱣㻝䏆䪧
䧃䥎䡥㽛䪧
䪧䥴
㑂䘜䥴䧤䁔㽛
䡥㑂㻝㽛㣀㑂䧃䃵䥎䪧
㑂䪍䁔䪍䧃㪔䘜㬻
䥎䏆䪍䏹
㽛㑂䱣㑂㻥
㪔䁔
䥴䒥㪔㪔䒥䁔䪧
䒥䈪䪧䒥
䃵㽛䏆㽛
䪍㽛㬻䥎
㽛䥎䏆
㣀䏹䪍
䁔䱣䈪䒥
䪧
㑂䥴䒥䧃䈪䁔
㣀䥴䁔㪔䁔㻝㑂䥎䧃䈪䪍
䁔䈪䥴
㽛䁔㑂䥩
䁔䂴㣀
䪧
䥎䒥䁔䧃㬻䈪
㑂䥎䱣㻝䧤㽛䪍
㽛㑂䏆䌱㽛䪧
䈪䒥㽛
㞧䒥 䁔䥴 䥴䪧䁔䏆 䒥䈪䪧䒥 䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䪍㻝 䒥䈪㽛 䑙㽛䁔 䆈䁔㪔䧃䏆䪍䘜 䱣䪧䥴 䪧 䌱䥎䪍䏆䁔䧃䁔䪍㣀䥴 䝽䱣䪍䥎䏆䥴䘜䪧㪔 䱣䁔䒥䈪 䒥䥎䪧㪔䥴䡥㽛㪔䏆㽛㪔䒥䪧㑂 䥴䱣䪍䥎䏆䥴䘜䪧㪔䥴䈪䁔䌱… 䈪䘜䘜䧤 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䏆䁔䏆 㪔䪍䒥 䥩㪔䪍䱣 䥴䱣䪍䥎䏆䥴䘜䪧㪔䥴䈪䁔䌱䧤 㬻㣀䒥 䈪㽛 䏆䁔䏆 䒥䪧䥩㽛 䪧 㻝㽛䱣 䘜䪍䥎㽛 䧃㑂䪧㪔䡥㽛䥴㻥
㘳䒥 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䘜䪍䘜㽛㪔䒥䧤 䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 㑂䪧㪔䏆㽛䏆 䪍㪔 䒥䈪㽛 㽛㪔䪍䥎䘜䪍㣀䥴 䥴䒥䪍㪔㽛 䥴䒥䪧㑂䪧䧃䘜䁔䒥㽛䧤 䥴䒥䪧㪔䏆䁔㪔䧃 䱣䁔䒥䈪 䈪䁔䥴 䥴䱣䪍䥎䏆䧤 㻝䪧䡥䁔㪔䧃 䒥䈪㽛 䈪㣀䘜䪧㪔䪍䁔䏆 䥴㽛䥎䌱㽛㪔䒥 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔 䒥䈪䪧䒥 䱣䪧䥴 䏆䪍㵡㽛㪔䥴 䪍㻝 䒥䁔䘜㽛䥴 㑂䪧䥎䧃㽛䥎 䒥䈪䪧㪔 䈪䁔䘜䧤 䱣䁔䒥䈪䪍㣀䒥 㻝㽛䪧䥎㻥
䃵䡥䥎䪧䪧䪧䘜䏆䒥㻥㑂㑂䁔
䪍㬻䃵䏆
㞧㪔
㪔䪍
䏆㑂㽛䊟䏆䌱㽛䪍
㦀䪍䘜㽛䧤䏆
䪍䘜䥎䪍㪔䥴㣀㽛
䪧㪔
䁔㦃䏆䪍
㻝䪍
䒥䁔䪧㪔䥴㪔䧤䒥
䁔䪍䪧䏆䁔䥎㖛䘜㑂䥎
䪍㽛䘜㪔䧤䰛
䥩䪧䘜䥴䥎
䥎䥴䏆䱣䪍
䈪䒥㽛
㻝䪍
䒥㽛䈪
䪧㪔䏆
䪍㪔䪧䘜䏆㣀䈪䁔
䈪䒥㽛
㪔䏆䥎䥴㣀㽛䈪䏆
㪔䥴䒥䌱䥎㽛㽛
䪍㪔䪍䏆䱣䏹䧃䥎䥴
㘳 䌱䁔㽛䥎䡥䁔㪔䧃 䥴䡥䥎㽛䪧䘜 㽛䘜䁔䒥䒥㽛䏆 㻝䥎䪍䘜 䒥䈪㽛 䘜䪍㣀䒥䈪 䪍㻝 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䈪㣀䘜䪧㪔䪍䁔䏆 䥴㽛䥎䌱㽛㪔䒥 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔㻥
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䡥䪍㣀㑂䏆 㪔䪍 㑂䪍㪔䧃㽛䥎 㻝䁔㪔䏆 䒥䈪㽛 㻝䪧䡥㽛 䪍㻝 䝽䱣㽛䪧䒥㽛䥎 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䈪㽛 䥎㽛䘜㽛䘜㬻㽛䥎㽛䏆 䁔㪔 䒥䈪㽛 䡥㣀䥎䥎㽛㪔䒥 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔’䥴 㻝㽛䪧䒥㣀䥎㽛䥴㻥 㠜㽛 䘜㽛䥎㽛㑂䃵 䱣䪧䒥䡥䈪㽛䏆 䒥䈪㽛 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔 㻉㣀䁔㽛䒥㑂䃵 㣀㪔䏆㽛䥎 䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃’䥴 䥴䱣䪍䥎䏆䥴䘜䪧㪔䥴䈪䁔䌱—㬻㣀䒥 䁔䒥 䱣䪧䥴㪔’䒥 䡥䪍䘜䌱㑂㽛䒥㽛㑂䃵 䥩䁔㑂㑂㽛䏆㻥
㻝䪍
㞧䒥
㽛䁔㽛㪔䏆䏆
㑂䁔䘜䪧䡥
䒥䁔
䃵㪔㪔䧃䪍’䏹䪧䧃䥴
㻥䥎䒥㣀㽛
䈪䒥䪧䒥
㽛䁔㑂䪧㦀
䏆䏹䥎䪍
㪔䡥䒥䧃䈪䪧䁔䡥
䘜㽛䏆㽛䥴㽛
䥴䪧䱣
䅹䈪㽛 䏆䁔䘜㽛㪔䥴䁔䪍㪔䪧㑂 䡥䥎䪧䡥䥩 䥴䈪䪍㣀㑂䏆 㬻㽛 䒥䈪㽛 㬻䪧䥴㽛 䡥䪧䘜䌱 㻝䪍䥎 䒥䈪䪍䥴㽛 䅹䥎䪧㪔䥴䡥㽛㪔䏆㽛㪔䒥䥴… 䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䱣䪧䥴 䌱䥎䪍㬻䪧㬻㑂䃵 䪍㪔㽛 䪍㻝 䒥䈪㽛䘜 䒥䪍䪍㻥
䅹䈪䪍㣀䧃䈪 䡥㣀䥎䁔䪍㣀䥴 䪧㬻䪍㣀䒥 䱣䈪䪧䒥 䒥䈪㽛䥴㽛 䅹䥎䪧㪔䥴䡥㽛㪔䏆㽛㪔䒥䥴 䱣㽛䥎㽛 䏆䪍䁔㪔䧃 䡥䪧䌱䒥㣀䥎䁔㪔䧃 䒥䈪㽛䥴㽛 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔䥴—䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䏆䁔䏆㪔’䒥 䌱㑂䪧㪔 䒥䪍 䥩㽛㽛䌱 䝽䪍㪔䧃 㠜䪧䪍䥎䪧㪔 䪧㪔䏆 䝽䪍㪔䧃 㿎䁔㪔䧃䧤 䱣䈪䪍 䱣㽛䥎㽛 䥴䒥䁔㑂㑂 䁔㪔 䒥䈪㽛 䄰䁔䥎䥎䪍䥎 䑙䪍䥎㑂䏆䧤 䱣䪧䁔䒥䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍䪍 㑂䪍㪔䧃㻥
䪧
㣀㬻䥎㽛䪍䒥㑂
䈪䒥䒥䪧
䱣䥴䪧
䡥㻥䪍䥎䡥㣀
䧃㽛㻝㽛䁔㑂㪔
䪧䥴㠜㪔䪍’䥎䪧
㽛䥎䒥䪧㽛䘜䌱䘜㽛䒥㪔䧤
䪍䱣㑂䏆㣀
䪍㪔䧃䝽
䪧䃵䥴䪧㑂䱣
䈪䁔䒥䱣
䪍䥴㽛䘜
㽛䥎䈪㽛䅹
…
䙁㣀䘜㬻㑂䁔㪔䧃䥴—䉐䉐
㻝㑂㑂㽛
䪍䏹䪍㪔䥎䧃䏆䥴䱣
㪔䒥䪍䁔
䒥䈪㽛
䪧䧃䪍䏹㪔䃵䧃㪔
䈪䪧㪔䏆
㪔䱣䪧䁔㑂䧤䧃䁔
䏹䏆䥎䪍
㽛䱣䃵㑂䪧䥩
䥴㘳
䁔䈪䥴
䒥䪍
㦃䏆䪍䁔
㣀䥴䪍䪍㪔㽛䘜䥎
㖛䥎䘜䪧䁔䪍䁔䥎䏆㑂
䥴䪧䏆䈪㽛䈪䒥㽛
䥎䥴䌱㽛䒥㽛㪔
䒥䈪㽛
㻝䪧㑂䁔䃵㪔㑂
䈪䒥㽛
䡥㽛㽛㑂䥴䃵㑂䥴㽛䪧䥴
䧃䧤䪍㣀䏆㪔䥎
䏆㪔䪧䘜䪍㣀䈪䁔
㑂䒥䃵䱣䥴䁔㻝
㽛䈪
㽛䈪䒥
䘜䪍㪔㽛䰛
㪔䁔
䪧䏆䥎䝽㬻㬻㻥䡥䪧
㽛䈪㑂䏆
㠜㽛 㻝㑂䁔䡥䥩㽛䏆 䒥䈪㽛 䏆䥎䪍䪍䌱䁔㪔䧃 㻝䥎䁔㪔䧃㽛 䪍㻝 䈪䁔䥴 䈪䪧䁔䥎䧤 䡥䈪㣀䡥䥩㑂㽛䏆 㑂䁔䧃䈪䒥㑂䃵䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䒥䈪㽛㪔 䥴䌱䥎㽛䪧䏆 䪍㣀䒥 䈪䁔䥴 㻝䁔㪔䧃㽛䥎䥴䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䪧 㬻㑂䪧䡥䥩 䈪䪍㑂㽛 䥴㣀䏆䏆㽛㪔㑂䃵 䪧㬻䥴䪍䥎㬻㽛䏆 䒥䈪㽛 㻝䪧㑂㑂㽛㪔 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔㻥
䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䥴䘜䁔㑂㽛䏆 䡥䪍㪔䒥㽛㪔䒥㽛䏆㑂䃵䧤 㑂㽛䪧䌱䁔㪔䧃 䏆䪍䱣㪔 㻝䥎䪍䘜 䒥䈪㽛 䥴䒥䪍㪔㽛 䥴䒥䪧㑂䪧䧃䘜䁔䒥㽛䧤 “䏹䁔䒥䒥㑂㽛 㬻䥎䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎䧤 䥴䪍䥎䥎䃵 䒥䪍 䥩㽛㽛䌱 䃵䪍㣀 䱣䪧䁔䒥䁔㪔䧃… 䱣䈪㽛䥎㽛 䁔䥴 䈪㽛㟰”
㪔䑙䈪㽛
䪍㑂㽛䧃㪔䥎
䪍䏆䡥㣀㑂
㽛䪧㑂䏆䏆㪔䧤
䃵㪔䪧
㽛䈪
䪍㪔
㽛䈪
䡥䒥䪧䥎㽛
㟰䂴㣀䁔
㻝䪍
䏹䪍㣀
㽛䥴㽛
䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 㑂䪍䪍䥩㽛䏆 䪧䥎䪍㣀㪔䏆 䁔㪔 䥴㣀䥎䌱䥎䁔䥴㽛䧤 㻝䁔㪔䏆䁔㪔䧃 㪔䪍 䒥䥎䪧䡥㽛 䪧䒥 䪧㑂㑂… 䈪㽛 䏆䁔䏆㪔’䒥 㽛㦀㽛㪔 㪔䪍䒥䁔䡥㽛 䱣䈪㽛㪔 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㑂䁔䒥䒥㑂㽛 㬻䥎䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎 㑂㽛㻝䒥㻥
“㞧䒥 䥴㽛㽛䘜䥴 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㑂䁔䒥䒥㑂㽛 㬻䥎䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎 䁔㪔䏆㽛㽛䏆 䈪䪧䥴 㽛䊟䡥㽛䌱䒥䁔䪍㪔䪧㑂 䡥䪧䌱䪧㬻䁔㑂䁔䒥䁔㽛䥴㻥” 䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䥴䘜䁔㑂㽛䏆䧤 䘜㣀䒥䒥㽛䥎䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍 䈪䁔䘜䥴㽛㑂㻝䧤 “㞧 䪧䘜 䒥䥎㣀㑂䃵 㑂䪍䪍䥩䁔㪔䧃 㻝䪍䥎䱣䪧䥎䏆 䒥䪍 䒥䈪㽛 㪔㽛䊟䒥 㽛㪔䡥䪍㣀㪔䒥㽛䥎㕲 䁔䒥’䥴 㬻㽛㽛㪔 䪧 㑂䪍㪔䧃 䒥䁔䘜㽛 䥴䁔㪔䡥㽛 㞧’㦀㽛 䘜㽛䒥 䥴㣀䡥䈪 䪧㪔 䁔㪔䒥䥎䁔䧃㣀䁔㪔䧃 䧃㽛㪔䒥㑂㽛䘜䪧㪔㻥”
䥴䪍䧤
䥎䪍䒥㻝䧃䪍
㪔䪧䉐㽛䘜”
䏆㪔䏆䃵㣀㑂䥴㽛
㽛䥎䧃䒥㽛䧤䥎
䪧㑂䌱䌱䏆䥴㽛
䝽䁔䪧䃵㪔䧃
㪔䧃㪔䪧䪍䏹䃵䧃
㝆”䈪
䈪䥴䁔
䁔䈪䥴
䪧䥴䥩
䪍䪧䥎䈪㻝㽛㽛䏆
䈪䱣䁔䒥
㽛䧤䥎䪧䏆
䒥䪍
䥎䏹䏆䪍
㞧
…
…
䁔䂴㣀
㦀䪧䁔䧃䧤㽛㪔㑂
䃵㻉㣀䒥㽛㑂䁔
䪍䒥
䃵䡥䁔㑂㣀䥩㻉
㣀䏹䪍
㪔䥴䪧䪧㑂㽛䱣㻥䏆䒥
䪍㻝
㪔䧃㻝䪧㑂䒥䪍䁔
䥴䘜䁔䪧䥴㦀㽛
㽛䪍䘜㦀䏆
䁔䌱㽛䡥㽛
䪧㪔㽛䥎䪍䒥䈪
㘳㽛䥎䒥㻝
㠜㽛 㣀䥴㽛䏆 䥴䪍䘜㽛 䒥䥎䁔䡥䥩䥴 䱣䈪㽛㪔 㑂㽛䪧㦀䁔㪔䧃䧤 䌱䥎䪍㬻䪧㬻㑂䃵 䏹䪍䥎䏆 䏹䪍㪔䧃䃵䪧㪔䧃 䱣䪍㣀㑂䏆 㪔䪍䒥 㬻㽛 䪧㬻㑂㽛 䒥䪍 㻝䁔㪔䏆 䈪䁔䘜㻥
䫄㦀㽛㪔 䥴䪍䧤 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䥴䒥䁔㑂㑂 㻝㽛㑂䒥 䥴䪍䘜㽛䱣䈪䪧䒥 㣀㪔㽛䪧䥴䃵㻥
㻝㞧
䒥䃵㽛䡥䏆㽛㪔㪔
䈪䱣䁔䒥
䥴䪧䱣
㽛䈪䒥
㽛㪔䥎㽛䒥䡥
䪍䒥
䪧䒥䥎㽛㻝
䪧䥴㑂㽛䘜
䏆㽛㪔䃵㪔㽛䒥䡥
䡥㪔㽛䥎䪍㪔㽛㪔䧃䁔䒥㣀
㽛…䘜㪔
㽛䧤㪔䪍䱣䥎
䈪㽛䥩䡥
㽛䈪䒥
䒥䌱㑂㣀䥎䡥䪧䥎䁔䪧
䪧
䥴䱣䪧
䪍㻝
㑂䡥㬻㣀
䁔䥴䒥䈪
䈪䱣䪧䒥
䁔㪔
䁔䁔㪔䒥䥴㪔㽛䡥䏆
䪍䡥䁔䧃㽛㪔㬻䘜
䈪䒥㽛
䪧䥎䡥䪧䒥䒥䒥
䒥䁔㪔䥴䒥㽛䥎㽛
䒥䈪㽛㪔
䪧䒥䡥㽛䪧䏆䒥䁔㦀
㠜䪍䱣㽛㦀㽛䥎䧤 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䥴䪍䪍㪔 㻝䪍㣀㪔䏆 䑙䈪䁔䒥㽛㮚䡥㑂䪧䏆 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔䧤 䱣䈪䪍 䈪䪧䏆 㻝䪧㑂㑂㽛㪔 㻝䥎䪍䘜 䒥䈪㽛 䄰䁔䥎䥎䪍䥎 䑙䪍䥎㑂䏆 䪍㪔 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㪔㽛䱣 䱣䪧䥴䒥㽛㑂䪧㪔䏆㻥
䏹㣀䡥䥩䁔㽛䥎 䒥䈪䪧㪔 䝽䱣㽛䪧䒥㽛䥎 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔䧤 䥴䈪㽛 䪧䌱䌱䪧䥎㽛㪔䒥㑂䃵 䈪䪧䏆㪔’䒥 㽛㪔䡥䪍㣀㪔䒥㽛䥎㽛䏆 䪧㪔䃵 㦃䪍䁔䏆 㖛䥎䁔䘜䪍䥎䏆䁔䪧㑂 䰛㽛䘜䪍㪔䥴 䪧㻝䒥㽛䥎 䈪㽛䥎 㻝䪧㑂㑂㻥
䈪㽛䒥
䱣㣀䪧䪧䥎㪔㽛
䥴䱣䪧
䈪䱣㪔䒥䪍䥎
䈪㪔䑙㽛
䥩䡥䪧䡥䥎㻥
䥎䪍㻝
䪧䥴㑂䪍
䥴䪧䱣
䈪㽛㻝䁔㑂䥴䘜
䥎㽛䈪䡥䪧䥴㪔䁔䧃
䪧䏆㪔
䈪㽛䥴
䪧䪍㽛㪔㑂
䁔䒥䈪䥴
㽛㪔䏆䥎㪔䪧䱣䁔䧃
㪔㘳
䥴䁔㑂㽛㪔䪍䘜䁔䪧㪔䏆
䏹㣀䪍
䏆㪔䪍㻝㣀
㣀䂴䁔
㦀㪔䧃䁔㽛
䪧䁔䂴䪍
㣀㑂䪧㖛
䪧㑂㣀䒥㦀㑂㪔䃵㽛㽛
䪍㪔䒥䁔
㽛䌱䥎䌱䪧䈪䥴
䥴䪧䱣
䈪䪧䒥䒥
䪧㑂㖛䧤㣀
㽛䧤䈪䥎
䑙䁔䏆㮚䡥㽛䪧䈪䒥㑂
㪔䪍
䌱㣀
㽛䒥䥴㑂䪧䥴㽛䪧䏆䈪㪔䱣—
䈪㪔䏆’䒥䪧
䅹䈪䁔䥴 䏆㽛䒥㽛䥎䘜䁔㪔䪧䒥䁔䪍㪔 䌱䥎䪍㬻䪧㬻㑂䃵 㽛䊟䡥㽛㽛䏆㽛䏆 䱣䈪䪧䒥 䥴䈪㽛 䡥䪍㣀㑂䏆 䪧䡥䈪䁔㽛㦀㽛 䒥䈪䥎䪍㣀䧃䈪 㪔䪍䥎䘜䪧㑂 䥎㽛䪧䥴䪍㪔䁔㪔䧃㻥
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 㻝䪍㑂㑂䪍䱣㽛䏆 㬻㽛䈪䁔㪔䏆 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 㑂䁔䥩㽛 䒥䈪䁔䥴䧤 䱣䪧䒥䡥䈪䁔㪔䧃 䈪㽛䥎 䱣䪧㪔䏆㽛䥎 㻝䪍䥎 䪧 㑂䪍㪔䧃 䏆䁔䥴䒥䪧㪔䡥㽛㻥 䏹䪧䒥㽛䥎 䪍㪔䧤 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䥴㣀䏆䏆㽛㪔㑂䃵 䥴䒥䪍䌱䌱㽛䏆 䪧㪔䏆 㻝䪍㣀㪔䏆 䪧 䌱㑂䪧䡥㽛 䒥䪍 䥴䁔䒥 䏆䪍䱣㪔㻥
䈪䝽㽛
䈪㽛䥎
㣀䏆㬻䥎㽛䁔
䈪㽛䥎
䥴㽛㑂䧃
䁔㪔
㽛㻝䪧䡥
䁔㻥䃵䧃㑂䒥䈪䒥
㽛㽛䥴㪔䧤䥩
䧃㣀䁔㪔䧃䧃䈪
䥎䈪㽛
䫄㦀㽛䥎䃵䒥䈪䁔㪔䧃 䪧䥎䪍㣀㪔䏆 䱣䪧䥴 䧃䥎䪧䃵䧤 䱣䁔䒥䈪䪍㣀䒥 䏆䪧䃵 䪍䥎 㪔䁔䧃䈪䒥䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䥴䈪㽛 䱣䪧䥴 䪧㑂䪍㪔㽛㻥
䏹䪧䒥㽛䥎䧤 䥴䈪㽛 䥴㽛㽛䘜㽛䏆 䒥䪍 䈪㽛䪧䥎 䥴䪍䘜㽛 㻝䪍䪍䒥䥴䒥㽛䌱䥴䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䥴㑂䪍䱣㑂䃵 㑂䁔㻝䒥㽛䏆 䈪㽛䥎 䈪㽛䪧䏆䧤 㽛䪧䧃㽛䥎㑂䃵 䡥䪧㑂㑂䁔㪔䧃 䪍㣀䒥䧤 “㖛䪧㣀㑂㻥㻥㻥 䁔䥴 䒥䈪䪧䒥 䃵䪍㣀䉐”
䒥䈪㽛
䪍䅹
㣀䥎㽛䒥
䥎㽛䈪
“㻥㻥䪍㑂䪧䥴㻥
㽛䈪䒥
䘜䪧㪔
㽛䪍㪔
䁔䏆䏆
䥴㣀䁔䥎䥎㽛䧤䥴䌱
䥴䪧䱣
䥴䱣䪧
䥎䈪㽛
㣀䥎䘜䁔䃵䥴㽛䒥䥴䪍
䥴䈪㽛
䱣䈪䪍
㣀䪍㪔䧃䃵
䃵㣀䪍
䱣䪍㠜”
㑂㻝㽛䥴䧤
䪍䥎䡥㽛㪔䏆㪔䒥㽛㣀㽛
㣀䧃䈪䒥䥎䪍䈪
“㞧 䒥䈪䁔㪔䥩 㞧 䏆䁔䏆㪔’䒥 䱣䪧䥩㽛 䃵䪍㣀䧤 䏆䁔䏆 㞧㟰” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䪧䌱䌱䥎䪍䪧䡥䈪㽛䏆 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛䧤 㑂䪍䪍䥩䁔㪔䧃 䏆䪍䱣㪔 䪧䒥 䈪㽛䥎㻥
㠜㽛䥎 㻝䪧䡥㽛 䱣䪧䥴 䥴䪍䘜㽛䱣䈪䪧䒥 䏆㣀䥴䒥䃵䧤 䌱䥎䪍㬻䪧㬻㑂䃵 䥴䒥䪧䁔㪔㽛䏆 㻝䥎䪍䘜 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䏆㽛䥴䪍㑂䪧䒥㽛 㑂䪧㪔䏆䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䒥䈪㽛 䧃䥎䁔䒥䒥䃵 䘜㣀䏆 䈪䪧䏆 㻝㣀䥎䒥䈪㽛䥎 䥴䘜㽛䪧䥎㽛䏆 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䌱䥎㽛䒥䒥䃵 㻝䪧䡥㽛 䁔㪔䒥䪍 䪧 䘜㽛䥴䥴 䏆㣀㽛 䒥䪍 䒥㽛䪧䥎䥴䧤 㑂䁔䥩㽛 䘜㽛㑂䒥㽛䏆 䘜䪧䥩㽛㣀䌱㻥
䪧
䏆㪔㽛㽛䁔䏆
㽛䪧㑂䒥䏆㽛䡥䁔
㻥䁔㪔
䪍䁔䥴㪔㽛䘜䁔䏆㪔
㘳㪔
䒥䥎䒥㽛䪧䘜
䁔䈪䈪䱣䡥
䪧䥴䱣
䈪䥴㽛
䪍㪔
䪍䁔䂴䪧
䥴䪧䱣
䒥䪧䃵㬻㽛㣀䧤
“㿎䪍㣀㻥㻥㻥 䱣㽛䥎㽛 䃵䪍㣀 䪧㑂䥴䪍 䒥䈪䥎䪍䱣㪔 䏆䪍䱣㪔 䈪㽛䥎㽛㟰”
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 㑂䪍䪍䥩㽛䏆 䪧䒥 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 䁔㪔 䥴䪍䘜㽛 䪧䘜䪧㵡㽛䘜㽛㪔䒥… 㞧㻝 䈪䁔䥴 䘜㽛䘜䪍䥎䃵 䱣䪧䥴㪔’䒥 䱣䥎䪍㪔䧃䧤 䒥䈪㽛㪔 䒥䈪㽛 䡥䪍㪔㦀㽛䥎䥴䪧䒥䁔䪍㪔 㬻㽛䒥䱣㽛㽛㪔 䈪䁔䘜 䪧㪔䏆 㘳 䏹䪧䁔 㿎㽛 䥴䈪䪍㣀㑂䏆 䈪䪧㦀㽛 㬻㽛㽛㪔 䈪㽛䪧䥎䏆 㬻䃵 䈪㽛䥎 䒥䪍䪍㻥
䪧䥴
䥴䈪㽛
㘳
㽛䏆䏆㪔䪍䥎䪍㣀䒥䥴
䒥䈪㽛
䝽䪍䧤
䁔䪧䏹
䧃㪔䪧㽛㪔䘜䁔
䂴䁔㣀
㘳
㪔䪍䥩㪔䱣
㦀䪧䒥㪔䥴䪍㽛䥎䁔䪍䡥㪔
䪍㻝䥎
䪍㻥㪔䱣䏆
䧤㽛㿎
䁔䒥
㪔䁔㽛䁔㻝㽛䃵㑂䒥䏆
䪍䂴䪧䁔
㪔㑂䪍䧃
䁔㑂䥴㬻䪍䁔䘜䥴䌱㽛
䒥䱣㽛䁔䈪
䁔㑑䈪䧃㪔䒥
䪍㻝
䏹㣀䪍
䪍䈪䱣䥎䒥
㽛㪔䪍
䱣䪧䥴
䥴䪧
䥴㑂䈪䪍㣀䏆
䱣䒥䁔䈪
㘳㪔
䁔㪔
䥴䈪䁔
䪍䒥
䪧䏹䁔
㽛䈪䪧㦀
㿎㽛
䡥㽛㑂䃵䪧䁔㦀䒥
䝽㽛㽛䁔㪔䧃 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀’䥴 㽛䊟䌱䥎㽛䥴䥴䁔䪍㪔䧤 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 䈪䪧䏆 䒥䪍 䪧䌱䪍㑂䪍䧃䁔㵡㽛䧤 “㞧’䘜 䥴䪍䥎䥎䃵䧤 䪧䡥䒥㣀䪧㑂㑂䃵䧤 㞧 䏆䁔䏆㪔’䒥 䌱䪧䃵 䪧䒥䒥㽛㪔䒥䁔䪍㪔 䒥䪍 䃵䪍㣀 䪧䒥 䒥䈪䪧䒥 䒥䁔䘜㽛㻥 㖛䪧㣀㑂 㑂䪍䪍䥩㽛䏆 䥴䪍 䥴䡥䪧䥎㽛䏆䧤 㞧 䱣䪧䥴 䪍㪔㑂䃵 䒥䈪䁔㪔䥩䁔㪔䧃 䪧㬻䪍㣀䒥 䈪䪍䱣 䒥䪍 䡥䪧㑂䘜 䈪䁔䘜 䏆䪍䱣㪔㻥”
䑙䈪䁔䡥䈪 䘜㽛䪧㪔䥴䧤 䥴䈪㽛 䏆䁔䏆㪔’䒥 㑂䁔䥴䒥㽛㪔 䪧䒥 䪧㑂㑂 䪍䥎 䡥䪧䥎㽛㻥
㞧㪔
䪧䥴䧃㪔㽛䈪䡥䧤
㖛㑂㻥㣀䪧
㪔䪍
㽛䥎䈪
㽛㪔㣀䏆䥎
䥴䡥㣀䈪
㽛䥴㪔㣀䏆䏆
䪍䱣䏆㑂䥎䧤
䈪㽛䥴
䃵䪍㪔㑂
䏆䪍㣀㽛䡥㻝䥴
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䥴㑂䪍䱣㑂䃵 䥴㻉㣀䪧䒥䒥㽛䏆 䏆䪍䱣㪔䧤 䌱㣀㑂㑂䁔㪔䧃 䪍㣀䒥 䪧 䡥㑂㽛䪧㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 䈪䪧㪔䏆䥩㽛䥎䡥䈪䁔㽛㻝 㻝䥎䪍䘜 䈪䁔䥴 㬻䪍䏆䃵䧤 䪧㪔䏆 㣀㪔䏆㽛䥎 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔’䥴 䪧䥴䒥䪍㪔䁔䥴䈪㽛䏆 䧃䪧㵡㽛䧤 䈪㽛 䱣䁔䌱㽛䏆 䒥䈪㽛 䏆䁔䥎䒥 䪍㻝㻝 䈪㽛䥎 㻝䪧䡥㽛 䱣䁔䒥䈪 䈪䁔䥴 䪍䱣㪔 䈪䪧㪔䏆䥴䧤 “䰛䪍 䃵䪍㣀 䈪䪧㦀㽛 䪧㪔 䪧㪔䥴䱣㽛䥎 㪔䪍䱣㟰”
䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䱣䪧䥴 䥴䒥㣀㪔㪔㽛䏆㻥
䪧㪔䏆
䁔’䒥㪔䏆䏆
䒥䪍
䧃䡥㻝㪔䪍䁔䥎
䏆䁔䱣䧤㽛䥴㑂㽛䥴䥎㪔
䁔㪔
㑂䧃䪍㪔
䈪㽛䝽
䥎㻥䒥㽛䥴
䈪䪧䏆
䃵䪍䏆㬻
㪔䁔
䏆㪔䪧
䱣䁔㪔㪔㽛䧃䪧䏆䥎
䪍䈪䒥㬻
䥩㪔䱣䪍
㽛䥎䥴䈪㑂㽛㻝
㪔䏆䱣䪍
㬻䪧㽛䥎㑂䃵
㽛䥴䈪
㽛䁔㽛㑂㪔㻝䧃
㬻㽛㪔㽛
䒥䁔䈪䥴
㪔䁔䧤䏆䘜
䈪䪍䱣
㽛䪧䏆䊟㽛㣀䈪䥴䒥
䥴䁔䒥
䃵㑂㪔䪍
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 㬻㽛䧃䪧㪔 䒥䪍 䱣䁔䌱㽛 䈪㽛䥎 䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎 䡥䈪㽛㽛䥩䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 䘜䪍㦀㽛䏆 䈪㽛䥎 㑂䁔䌱䥴䧤 䪧䌱䌱㽛䪧䥎䁔㪔䧃 䥴䪍䘜㽛䱣䈪䪧䒥 䏆䪧㵡㽛䏆㻥
“㞧䒥’䥴 䪍䥩䪧䃵㻥” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䥴䪧䁔䏆 䥴䪍㻝䒥㑂䃵䧤 “㞧䒥’䥴 䌱䥎㽛䒥䒥䃵 㻉㣀䁔㽛䒥 䈪㽛䥎㽛䧤 㻉㣀䁔㽛䒥 㽛㪔䪍㣀䧃䈪 䒥䪍 䡥䪧㑂䘜 䥴䪍䘜㽛䪍㪔㽛㻥㻥㻥 䅹䈪㽛 䪧㪔䥴䱣㽛䥎 䏆䪍㽛䥴㪔’䒥 㪔㽛䡥㽛䥴䥴䪧䥎䁔㑂䃵 䈪䪧㦀㽛 䒥䪍 㬻㽛 䥩㪔䪍䱣㪔㻥”
㻥㑂㣀㻥䪧”㖛㻥
䈪䒥㻥䁔㪔㽛䘜䪍䥴䧃
㬻䪧㣀䪍䒥
䪧㦀㣀㽛䧃㑂䃵
䈪䪍㽛䌱䏆
㻝䥎䪍
䝽䈪㽛
䒥”䪧䈪䑙
“䑙䈪㽛㪔 㞧 䡥䪧䘜㽛 䏆䪍䱣㪔䧤 㞧 䏆䁔䏆㪔’䒥 䥴㽛㽛 䒥䈪㽛 䡥䈪䁔㑂䏆㻥” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䥴䪧䁔䏆㻥
䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 㑂㽛䒥 䪍㣀䒥 䪧 㬻䥎㽛䪧䒥䈪 䪍㻝 䥎㽛㑂䁔㽛㻝 䪧㪔䏆 䡥㣀䥎㑂㽛䏆 㣀䌱 䪧䧃䪧䁔㪔㻥 㘳㑂䒥䈪䪍㣀䧃䈪 䒥䈪㽛 䏆䁔䥎䒥 䪍㪔 䈪㽛䥎 㻝䪧䡥㽛 䈪䪧䏆 㬻㽛㽛㪔 䱣䁔䌱㽛䏆 䡥㑂㽛䪧㪔䧤 䁔䒥 䪧㑂䥴䪍 䥎㽛㦀㽛䪧㑂㽛䏆 䈪㽛䥎 㻝䪧䒥䁔䧃㣀㽛䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䥴䈪㽛 䥴䪧䁔䏆 㻝䪧䁔㪔䒥㑂䃵䧤 “㞧 䏆䪍㪔’䒥 䥩㪔䪍䱣 䈪䪍䱣 㖛䪧㣀㑂 䁔䥴 䏆䪍䁔㪔䧃 㪔䪍䱣䧤 䁔㻝 䥴䈪㽛’㑂㑂 䒥䥎㽛䪧䒥 䈪䁔䘜 䱣㽛㑂㑂㻥㻥㻥”
‘䒥䪍䱣㪔
㣀䪍䏹
㽛䪧䥴䥩䏆㻥
䁔䈪䘜
䒥䒥䪧㽛䥎
“䰛䪍
䁔㣀䂴
㑂㟰”㽛䱣㑂
䒥䁔䥩㪔䈪
㻥䪍㣀䃵㻥㻥
䥴䈪㽛
䃵㣀㽛㪔䏆㑂䏆䥴
䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 䥴䈪䪍䪍䥩 䈪㽛䥎 䈪㽛䪧䏆䧤 “㞧 䏆䪍㪔’䒥 䥩㪔䪍䱣䧤 㯾㣀䥴䒥䧤 䁔㻝 䁔䒥 䱣㽛䥎㽛 䘜㽛㻥㻥㻥”
䝽䈪㽛 䥴䈪䪍䪍䥩 䈪㽛䥎 䈪㽛䪧䏆 䪧䧃䪧䁔㪔䧤 䒥䈪㽛㪔 㑂䪍䪍䥩㽛䏆 䪧䒥 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀䧤 䥴䈪䪍䱣䁔㪔䧃 䪧 㬻䁔䒥䒥㽛䥎 䥴䘜䁔㑂㽛䧤 “㘳䡥䒥㣀䪧㑂㑂䃵䧤 㞧’㦀㽛 䥴㽛㽛㪔 㻉㣀䁔䒥㽛 䪧 㻝㽛䱣 㖛䪧㣀㑂䥴 䪧㑂䥎㽛䪧䏆䃵㻥”
䥎䁔㽛䌱䥴㽛㪔䪍㻥䊟䥴
䁔㣀䂴
㣀䏹䪍
䒥㪔㑂㽛䧃䁔䥴㪔䁔
䈪䏆䥴䪍㽛䱣
䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 䱣䈪䁔䥴䌱㽛䥎㽛䏆䧤 “䅹䈪㽛䃵㻥㻥㻥 䥴䪍䘜㽛 䪍㻝 䒥䈪㽛䘜 䈪䪧䏆 㯾㣀䥴䒥 㬻㽛㽛㪔 㬻䪍䥎㪔䧤 䒥䈪䪧䒥 䥴䘜䪧㑂㑂䧤 㪔䪍䒥 㽛㦀㽛㪔 䪍䌱㽛㪔䁔㪔䧃 䒥䈪㽛䁔䥎 㽛䃵㽛䥴㻥 㘳㪔䏆 䥴䪍䘜㽛 䈪䪧䏆 䪧㑂䥎㽛䪧䏆䃵 㑂㽛䪧䥎㪔㽛䏆 䒥䪍 䱣䪧㑂䥩䧤 㯾㣀䘜䌱䁔㪔䧃 䪧䥎䪍㣀㪔䏆㻥㻥㻥”
䝽䈪㽛 䁔㪔䥴䒥䁔㪔䡥䒥䁔㦀㽛㑂䃵 䧃䥎䪧㬻㬻㽛䏆 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀’䥴 䪧䥎䘜䧤 䈪㽛䥎 㽛䃵㽛䥴 䥴䈪䁔㪔䁔㪔䧃 䱣䁔䒥䈪 䌱䥎䁔䏆㽛䧤 “䅹䈪㽛䃵 䪧䥎㽛 䪧㑂㑂 㽛䊟䡥㽛㑂㑂㽛㪔䒥䧤 䥴䪍䘜㽛 㑂䪍㦀㽛 䏆䥎䪧䱣䁔㪔䧃䧤 䥴䪍䘜㽛 㑂䪍㦀㽛 䥴䁔㪔䧃䁔㪔䧃㻥”
㑂䱣㑂䁔
䒥䪧
䪧䧃㑂䈪㣀
㘳”䏆㪔
䪧䥴
䪧䒥
䘜㽛䉐
䪧䥴
䥩䪧䱣㑂䧤
䪧㑂㣀㖛䧤
䈪㽛䑙㪔
䏆㑂䁔㽛䘜䧤䥴
㬻䧃䁔
䥴䘜㑂䁔䧤㽛
䁔䡥䪍䘜䁔䈪㽛䥴㣀䧤㦀䥴
䒥䈪㽛䃵
䡥䪧㪔
㪔䪧䏆
䧃㑂䪧䈪㣀
䡥㪔䪧
㻥㻥㽛㻥䘜”
㽛䃵䥎㦀
䪍䘜䥴㽛
䥎䪧㽛
䝽䈪㽛
㘳䥴 䁔㻝 䥎㽛䪧㑂䁔㵡䁔㪔䧃 䪧㑂㑂 䒥䈪㽛䥴㽛 䱣㽛䥎㽛 㑂䪍㪔䧃 䧃䪍㪔㽛䧤 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 㻉㣀䁔䡥䥩㑂䃵 㻝㽛㑂㑂 䥴䁔㑂㽛㪔䒥㻥
䝽䈪㽛 䥴䒥䁔㑂㑂 䥴䈪䪍䪍䥩 䈪㽛䥎 䈪㽛䪧䏆䧤 “䑉㣀䒥䧤 䒥䈪㽛䃵’䥎㽛 䪧䡥䒥㣀䪧㑂㑂䃵 㪔䪍䒥 䘜䃵 㖛䪧㣀㑂㻥 㞧 䥩㪔䪍䱣 䁔䒥䧤 㞧’䘜 㦀㽛䥎䃵 䡥㑂㽛䪧䥎䧤 䒥䈪㽛䃵㻥㻥㻥 䒥䈪㽛䃵 䪧䥎㽛 㪔䪍䒥䧤 䒥䈪㽛䃵㻥㻥㻥 䒥䈪㽛䃵 䪧㑂㑂 䈪䪧㦀㽛 䒥䈪㽛䁔䥎 䪍䱣㪔 䘜䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎䥴㻥”
䏹㣀䪍
䪍㪔䱣㻥䏆
䪧䒥䥴
䂴䁔㣀
“䰛䪍 䃵䪍㣀 䥩㪔䪍䱣㟰 䑙䈪㽛㪔 䃵䪍㣀 䪧䥴䥩㽛䏆 䘜㽛 䁔㻝 㞧 䥎㽛䪧㑂㑂䃵 䱣䪧䥴 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䡥䈪䁔㑂䏆’䥴 䘜䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎㻥㻥㻥 㞧 䱣䪧䥴 䥎㽛䪧㑂㑂䃵 䥴䡥䪧䥎㽛䏆㻥” 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 䥎㽛䥴䒥㽛䏆 䈪㽛䥎 䡥䈪䁔㪔 䪍㪔 䈪㽛䥎 䥩㪔㽛㽛䥴䧤 㯾㣀䥴䒥 㑂䪍䪍䥩䁔㪔䧃 䪧䈪㽛䪧䏆䧤 “㞧 䱣䪧䥴 䪧㻝䥎䪧䁔䏆㻥㻥㻥 䪧㻝䥎䪧䁔䏆 㞧 䡥䪍㣀㑂䏆㪔’䒥 㻝䁔㪔䏆 䈪䁔䘜 䪧䧃䪧䁔㪔㻥”
“䝽䪍 䃵䪍㣀 䪧䌱䌱㽛䪧䥎㽛䏆 䁔㪔 㻝䥎䪍㪔䒥 䪍㻝 㖛䪧㣀㑂 䪧䒥 䒥䈪㽛 䪧䁔䥎䌱䪍䥎䒥㟰” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 㑂䪍䪍䥩㽛䏆 䪧䒥 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔䧤 “䑉㽛䡥䪧㣀䥴㽛 䃵䪍㣀 䥩㪔㽛䱣䧤 䈪䁔䥴 䥎㽛䪧㑂 䘜䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎 䱣䪧䥴㪔’䒥 䒥䈪㽛䥎㽛㻥”
䱣䥴’䒥䪧㪔
䒥㯾…㣀䥴
䪍䒥
…㯾㣀䥴䒥
䈪䁔䘜
䪧䒥
䈪䝽㽛
䏆䪧䱣䒥㪔㽛
䁔㻝
㪔䪍
㻥䏆䈪㑂䁔䡥
䁔㪔䪍䈪䧃䥴㽛䒥䘜
㞧”
䪍䱣㪔䥩
䒥㣀㯾䥴
䪧䥴䃵
㞧
㪔䪧䌱䁔
䪧䱣䥴䃵䪧㑂
䒥䈪㽛
䒥䪍䈪䧤䈪䒥䧃㣀
䁔㑂㻥䡥䈪䏆
䥩㑂䁔㽛
㽛䘜㻥㻥㻥
䪍㪔
㞧
䥴㯾䒥㣀…
䪍㻝
䥴䪧㑂䃵䪧䱣
䃵䥎㽛㑂䪧㑂
䥴㽛㽛
䒥䁔㻥䈪㻥㻥䥴”
㪔䡥䪧
䒥䪍㑂䏆
䧃䧤䪧䁔㪔䪧
㻝㽛䧤㑂䒥
䪧㑂䥴䪍
㞧…
㞧”䒥
䪍㪔䪍㽛䥴䘜㽛
㽛㑂䥴䥴’㽛
䌱㣀䥎”㻥䌱䥴㽛䪍
䈪䒥㽛
䒥㑂㑂㽛
䪍䒥
㻝䧤䘜㑂䃵䥴㽛
䥴㑂䧤䪍䪧
㻝䪍
㪔㑂䃵䪍
䪧䱣䃵䪧
䏆䪧䃵
䪍㑂䏆䪍䥩㽛
㬻䒥㣀
䪧㣀㑂㖛
䥴㑂䪍㪔䁔䧃
䒥䈪㽛
䒥䏆㪔䁔㪔㽛
㣀㯾䏆䘜䌱㽛㻥
㞧
㞧
㞧
䂴䁔㣀䧤
䱣䧃䪧㪔䒥㪔䁔
䪍䏹㣀
䒥䪍
䒥䡥䧤䡥䪧䏆䁔㽛㪔
㪔䪍䒥䧃䁔䧤䌱䥴䌱
䪧䡥㽛䑉㣀䥴㽛
䥩㽛䪧䒥
‘䁔㪔䏆䏆䒥
‘㽛㞧㦀
䘜䃵䥴㽛㑂㻝
䝽䈪㽛 䱣䪧䥴 䪧㑂䥎㽛䪧䏆䃵 䥴䌱㽛䪧䥩䁔㪔䧃 䁔㪔 䧃䥎䁔㽛㻝䧤 㽛㦀㽛㪔 䥴䪍䘜㽛䱣䈪䪧䒥 䡥䈪䪍䥩㽛䏆䧤 䪧䥴 䁔㻝 䪧 㑂㣀䘜䌱 䱣䪧䥴 䁔㪔 䈪㽛䥎 䒥䈪䥎䪍䪧䒥䧤 “㞧㻥㻥㻥 㞧 䡥䪧㪔 㻝䁔㪔䏆 䈪䁔䘜䧤 㞧 䱣䁔㑂㑂 㻝䁔㪔䏆 䈪䁔䘜㻥㻥㻥 䈪㽛㻥㻥㻥 䈪㽛’䥴 䪧㑂䱣䪧䃵䥴 㬻㽛㽛㪔 䱣䪧䁔䒥䁔㪔䧃 㻝䪍䥎 䘜㽛㻥”
“㖛㑂㽛䪧䥴㽛 䧃䁔㦀㽛 䘜㽛 䪧㪔 䪧㪔䥴䱣㽛䥎䧤 䪍䥩䪧䃵㻥” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䥴㣀䏆䏆㽛㪔㑂䃵 䪧䥴䥩㽛䏆 䥴䪍㻝䒥㑂䃵㻥
“㻥㻝㞧㻥㻥
㞧㻥㻥㻥
㻝䁔
㑂㣀䁔㪔䒥㻥㻥㻥
䈪䥎䥎㽛䒥䪧
䘜㽛㬻䃵䪧
㞧㪔
㞧
䱣㣀䏆㑂䪍
䌱㽛䥩㽛
㪔䁔
䁔㻝䏆㪔
䥴㑂䧤䌱䁔
㽛䥎䈪
䪍䘜㦀䏆㽛
䒥䁔
䥎㟰䪧䡥㵡䃵
㘳䘜
䧃㪔䌱㯾㣀䁔䘜
㻝䪍
㪔䁔䘜䥴㪔䥴䁔䪍㽛䏆
㪔䁔
䁔㑂䃵䥴㑂
㽛䪧䏆䧤㵡
䏆䪧䃵
䪧䪍䂴䁔
㪔㘳
䈪䥩䒥䁔㪔䧤
䌱䪍㑂䁔䥴䥴䧤㽛㬻
䘜㽛㟰”
䁔䱣䒥㽛䈪
㞧
㪔䁔㽛㻝䒥䥎㽛㻝䏆
䒥㽛䈪
䁔䱣㑂㑂
㞧
䁔䘜䈪㻥
䁔䥴
䒥㪔㑂䁔㣀
䪍䧃
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 㑂䪍䪍䥩㽛䏆 䪧䒥 䈪㽛䥎䧤 䒥㣀䥎㪔㽛䏆 䒥䈪㽛 䈪䪧㪔䏆䥩㽛䥎䡥䈪䁔㽛㻝 䒥䪍 䪧 䡥㑂㽛䪧㪔 䌱㑂䪧䡥㽛䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䧃㽛㪔䒥㑂䃵 䱣䁔䌱㽛䏆 䒥䈪㽛 䒥㽛䪧䥎 䘜䪧䥎䥩䥴 䪍㪔 䈪㽛䥎 㻝䪧䡥㽛䧤 “㿎䪍㣀’㦀㽛 㯾㣀䘜䌱㽛䏆 䪧䘜䪍㪔䧃 䘜䪧㪔䃵 䏆䁔㻝㻝㽛䥎㽛㪔䒥 䏆䁔䘜㽛㪔䥴䁔䪍㪔䥴䧤 䥴㽛㽛㪔 䘜䪧㪔䃵 䡥䈪䁔㑂䏆䥎㽛㪔䧤 㣀㪔䏆䪍㣀㬻䒥㽛䏆㑂䃵䧤 䁔㻝 䃵䪍㣀 䱣㽛䥎㽛 㑂䁔䥩㽛 䈪㽛䥎 䪧㪔䏆 䱣䁔㑂㑂䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍 䥎㽛䌱㑂䪧䡥㽛 䪍㪔㽛 䁔㪔 䥴䪍 䘜䪧㪔䃵 䏆䁔䘜㽛㪔䥴䁔䪍㪔䥴䧤 䌱㽛䥎䈪䪧䌱䥴䧤 䃵䪍㣀 䱣䪍㣀㑂䏆 䈪䪧㦀㽛 㬻㽛㽛㪔 䈪䪧䌱䌱䃵 䪧㑂䥎㽛䪧䏆䃵䧤 䥎䁔䧃䈪䒥㟰”
䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䁔㪔 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛’䥴 㑂䁔䌱䥴 䥴㑂䁔䧃䈪䒥㑂䃵 㻝䪍㑂䏆㽛䏆䧤 䒥䥎㽛䘜㬻㑂䁔㪔䧃㻥
㑂㽛’䥴㽛䥴
䪍䒥
㻥䏆䡥䁔”㑂䈪
䃵㣀䪍
䪧㪔䱣䒥
㪔䏆䪍㽛
䪍䃵㣀䧤
䥴㪔㽛䪍䘜䪍㽛
䒥㑂㑂䥴䁔
䏹㣀䪍
㑂䁔䈪㽛䥎䧃䧤䒥
㽛䘜䪍䥎
㽛䪧䥩䒥
㟰䪍䃵㣀
䡥䪍㦀㽛䁔
䪧䈪㪔䒥
‘䏆㪔䒥䪍
㦀㽛䫄㪔
䈪䒥㽛
䥴䁔’㣀䂴
㽛䃵䒥
䈪䧤䒥䪧䒥
䃵㽛䪍㣀㦀’
㣀䑉䒥”
㽛䘜䥴㪔䪧
䧃䒥䪍
㦀䪧䈪㽛
䪍䒥
㽛㦀㪔䥎㽛
㻝䁔
㑂䁔䈪䡥䏆
䁔㑂㽛㻝
䪍㣀䃵䥎
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䥎䪧䁔䥴㽛䏆 䈪䁔䥴 䈪䪧㪔䏆䧤 䪧 䧃㑂䁔䘜䘜㽛䥎 䪍㻝 㑂䁔䧃䈪䒥 㻝㑂䁔䡥䥩㽛䥎䁔㪔䧃 䱣䁔䒥䈪䁔㪔 䈪䁔䥴 䌱䪧㑂䘜䧤 䧃䥎䪧䏆㣀䪧㑂㑂䃵 㽛䊟䌱䪧㪔䏆䁔㪔䧃㻥
䑙䁔䒥䈪䁔㪔 䒥䈪䪧䒥 㻝䪧䁔㪔䒥 䱣䈪䁔䒥㽛 䈪䪍㑂䃵 㑂䁔䧃䈪䒥 䱣䪧䥴 䒥䈪㽛 䁔㪔䁔䒥䁔䪧㑂 㻝䪍䥎䘜 䪍㻝 䪧 㑂䁔㻝㽛㻥㻥㻥 㘳㑂䒥䈪䪍㣀䧃䈪 䁔䒥 䱣䪧䥴㪔’䒥 䃵㽛䒥 䡥㑂㽛䪧䥎 䒥䪍 䥴㽛㽛 䪧㑂㑂 䒥䈪㽛 㻝㽛䪧䒥㣀䥎㽛䥴䧤 㪔䪍䥎 䱣㽛䥎㽛 䒥䈪㽛 㑂䁔䘜㬻䥴 㻝㣀㑂㑂䃵 䏆㽛㻝䁔㪔㽛䏆䧤 䁔䒥 䱣䪧䥴 㣀㪔䏆䪍㣀㬻䒥㽛䏆㑂䃵 䪧 䡥䪍䘜䌱㑂㽛䒥㽛 㑂䁔㻝㽛㻥”
䂴䁔䪧䪍
䒥䪍䈪㣀䡥
䒥䱣䈪㽛䁔
䁔䧤㪔䃵䒥
㽛㬻䥎䪍㻝㽛
䈪䒥㽛䱣䥎䁔䏆䱣
䒥䪍
㪔䁔
䪧䥴
㻝㑂㽛䁔䧤
䒥䥎䏆㽛㽛䘜㬻㑂
䪧䏆㪔
䧃䱣䪧㪔䁔䒥㪔
㪔㘳
䈪䥴㽛
㣀䒥䧤䪍
㪔䏆㽛㽛㽛㪔䁔䏆䒥䌱㪔
䪧㽛䥴㽛䏆䁔䈪䒥䒥
䥎䡥䈪㽛䪧䏆㽛
䃵䒥㽛
䁔䥴䒥䈪
䁔㣀䡥䈪䒥㪔䪍㻥䧃
䝽㣀䏆䏆㽛㪔㑂䃵䧤 䥴䈪㽛 䈪㽛䪧䥎䏆 䒥䈪㽛 䈪㽛䪧䥎䒥㬻㽛䪧䒥 䪍㻝 䒥䈪䁔䥴 㑂䁔䒥䒥㑂㽛 㑂䁔㻝㽛䧤 䪧 䥴䪍㣀㪔䏆 䥴㽛㽛䘜䁔㪔䧃㑂䃵 䁔㪔 䡥䪍䘜䌱㑂㽛䒥㽛 䥴䃵㪔䡥 䱣䁔䒥䈪 䈪㽛䥎 䪍䱣㪔 䈪㽛䪧䥎䒥㬻㽛䪧䒥㻥
㠜㽛䥎 䒥㽛䪧䥎䥴 䡥䪍㪔䒥䁔㪔㣀㽛䏆 䒥䪍 㻝䪧㑂㑂䧤 䃵㽛䒥 䥴䈪㽛 䥴䒥䪍䪍䏆 䒥䈪㽛䥎㽛 䏆䪧㵡㽛䏆㻥
䁔䏆䌱䧃䥴㑂䘜㽛
䪍䪧㑂䥴
䥴䁔
㦀䁔䥎㻥”䥎䪧㽛䏆
㽛䥎㦀㽛
㯾䥴㣀䒥
“㠜㽛
䈪䪧䧃㦀㪔䁔
㽛䈪䒥
䃵㑂㪔䪍
㣀䪧㑂㖛䧤
㽛䥎㪔㽛㦀
䃵㣀䒥䥎㑂
䏆䥴㽛㪔㽛䥎䪍䡥䁔䏆
㑂䧤䪍䱣䏆䥎
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 㑂䪍䪍䥩㽛䏆 䪧䒥 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䪧䒥 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䘜䪍䘜㽛㪔䒥䧤 “䅹䁔䘜㽛 䪧㪔䏆 䥴䌱䪧䡥㽛 䪧䥎㽛 䥎㽛㑂䪧䒥䁔㦀㽛䧤 㻝䪍䥎 䈪䪍䱣 䘜䪧㪔䃵 䏆䁔䘜㽛㪔䥴䁔䪍㪔䥴 䃵䪍㣀 䪧䥎㽛 㬻㑂㽛䥴䥴㽛䏆 䪧㪔䏆 㻝䪧㦀䪍䥎㽛䏆 䁔㪔䧤 䒥䈪㽛䥎㽛 䱣䁔㑂㑂 㬻㽛 䪧䥴 䘜䪧㪔䃵 䱣䈪㽛䥎㽛 䘜䁔䥴㻝䪍䥎䒥㣀㪔㽛 䥴㣀䥎䥎䪍㣀㪔䏆䥴 䃵䪍㣀㻥 㖛㽛䥎䈪䪧䌱䥴 䃵䪍㣀 㬻㽛㑂䪍㪔䧃 䒥䪍 䒥䈪㽛 㣀㪔㻝䪍䥎䒥㣀㪔䪧䒥㽛 䥴䁔䏆㽛䧤 㬻㣀䒥 㽛㦀㽛㪔 䥴䪍䧤 䃵䪍㣀 㪔㽛㦀㽛䥎 䒥䈪䪍㣀䧃䈪䒥 䪍㻝 䒥䪧䥩䁔㪔䧃 䪧㪔䪍䒥䈪㽛䥎 㻝䪍䥎䒥㣀㪔䪧䒥㽛 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔’䥴 㑂䁔㻝㽛 䒥䪍 䥎㽛䱣䥎䁔䒥㽛 䥴䪍䘜㽛䒥䈪䁔㪔䧃㻥 㿎䪍㣀㻥㻥㻥 㻝䪍䥎 䥴䪍䘜㽛䪍㪔㽛 㑂䁔䥩㽛 䃵䪍㣀䧤 㽛㦀㽛㪔 䒥䈪䪍㣀䧃䈪 䏆㽛䥴䒥䁔㪔䃵 䈪䪧䥴 䥴㣀㬻㯾㽛䡥䒥㽛䏆 䃵䪍㣀 䒥䪍 䪧㑂㑂 䒥䈪䁔䥴䧤 㬻㣀䒥 䪧䒥 㑂㽛䪧䥴䒥㻥㻥㻥”
䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䥴䘜䁔㑂㽛䏆 䪧㪔䏆 䥴䪧䁔䏆䧤 “㘳䒥 㑂㽛䪧䥴䒥 䈪㽛䥎㽛 䱣䁔䒥䈪 䘜㽛䧤 䒥䈪㽛䥎㽛’䥴 䪧 䥴䈪䪧䥎㽛 䪍㻝 㻝䪍䥎䒥㣀㪔㽛 䒥䈪䪧䒥 㬻㽛㑂䪍㪔䧃䥴 䒥䪍 䃵䪍㣀㻥㻥㻥 䝽䪍䧤 䪧䥎㽛 䃵䪍㣀 䱣䁔㑂㑂䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍 䪧䡥䡥㽛䌱䒥 䁔䒥㟰”
“㻥”㻥㻥䈪䃵䑙
㽛䈪䝽
䥴䈪䒥䁔
㻥䘜䪧㪔
䪧䒥
䒥䥴䏆䥎㽛䪧
㪔䃵䪍㣀䧃
䥩㑂㬻䃵䪧㑂㪔
䥎㽛䒥䥴䃵䪍䘜㣀䥴䁔
“㖛㽛䥎䈪䪧䌱䥴 㞧’䘜 㻝㽛㽛㑂䁔㪔䧃 䪧 㑂䁔䒥䒥㑂㽛 㻝䥎㽛㽛䥎 䥎䁔䧃䈪䒥 㪔䪍䱣㻥”
䝽䪧䃵䁔㪔䧃 䥴䪍䧤 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䧃㽛㪔䒥㑂䃵 䌱䥎㽛䥴䥴㽛䏆 䒥䈪㽛 㑂䁔䧃䈪䒥 䥴䌱䈪㽛䥎㽛 䡥䪍㪔䒥䪧䁔㪔䁔㪔䧃 䒥䈪䪧䒥 䁔㪔䁔䒥䁔䪧㑂 㑂䁔㻝㽛 䁔㪔䒥䪍 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔’䥴 䪧㬻䏆䪍䘜㽛㪔㻥
䪍䃵㻥㬻䏆
䧃䒥䥎䏆䪧㪔㽛䒥䁔㽛
㑂䱣䃵㑂䪍䥴
䪍㪔䒥䁔
䂴䪧䁔䪍
㞧䒥
䥴㪔㘳’
䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔 䥴㣀䏆䏆㽛㪔㑂䃵 㽛䘜㬻䥎䪧䡥㽛䏆 䈪㽛䥎 䪧㬻䏆䪍䘜㽛㪔 䒥䁔䧃䈪䒥㑂䃵䧤 㑂䪍䥴䒥 䁔㪔 䒥䈪䪍㣀䧃䈪䒥㻥
“䲡䪍 䪍㪔㻥” 䏹㣀䪍 䂴䁔㣀 䱣䪧㦀㽛䏆 䈪䁔䥴 䈪䪧㪔䏆 䪧䒥 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䘜䪍䘜㽛㪔䒥䧤 “䙁㽛㬻䪧㑂䪧㪔䡥㽛 䒥䈪㽛 䥴䡥䪧㑂㽛䥴 䪍㻝 㻝䪍䥎䒥㣀㪔㽛 䪧㪔䏆 䘜䁔䥴㻝䪍䥎䒥㣀㪔㽛㻥㻥㻥 䅹䈪㽛 㻝䪍䥎䒥㣀㪔䪧䒥㽛 䥴䁔䏆㽛 䈪䪧䥴 㬻㽛㽛㪔 䒥䪍䪍 䥎㣀䁔㪔㽛䏆䧤 䥴䪍 㑂㽛䒥 䒥䈪㽛 㣀㪔㻝䪍䥎䒥㣀㪔䪧䒥㽛 䥴䁔䏆㽛 䘜䪧䥩㽛 䪧䘜㽛㪔䏆䥴㻥㻥㻥 䅹䈪㽛 䱣䪍䥎㑂䏆䧤 䒥䈪㽛 䱣䪍䥎㑂䏆 䱣䪍㪔’䒥 䏆䪍 䪧㪔䃵䒥䈪䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍 䃵䪍㣀㻥”
㻥㻥㻥
䑙䁔䒥䈪䁔㪔 䒥䈪㽛 䁔㪔䒥㽛䥎䏆䁔䘜㽛㪔䥴䁔䪍㪔䪧㑂 䡥䥎㽛㦀䁔䡥㽛䧤 䒥䈪㽛 䧃䥎䪧䃵 䒥䪍㪔㽛䥴 䥎㽛䡥㽛䏆㽛䏆 㻝䥎䪍䘜 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔’䥴 㽛䃵㽛䥴 䪧䒥 䒥䈪䁔䥴 䁔㪔䥴䒥䪧㪔䒥㻥
䏹䁔䥩㽛 䪧 䌱䥎䪍㯾㽛䡥䒥䁔䪍㪔䧤 䒥䈪㽛 㬻䪧䥎䥎㽛㪔 㑂䪧㪔䏆 䁔㪔䥴䒥䪧㪔䒥㑂䃵 䒥㣀䥎㪔㽛䏆 㑂㣀䥴䈪 䪧㪔䏆 㦀㽛䥎䏆䪧㪔䒥䧤 䪧㪔䏆 䱣䈪㽛㪔 䥴䈪㽛 䡥䪧䘜㽛 䒥䪍 䈪㽛䥎 䥴㽛㪔䥴㽛䥴䧤 䥴䈪㽛 䱣䪧䥴 䪧㑂䥎㽛䪧䏆䃵 䁔㪔 䪧 䌱㽛䪧䡥㽛㻝㣀㑂 䌱䪧䥎䥩㻥
䪧
㪔䪍
䪧䱣䥴
㽛㬻㻥䈪䡥㪔
䝽䈪㽛
䥎䥩䌱䪧
䥴㽛䏆㽛䒥䪧
䑉㣀䒥 䥴䈪㽛 䥴㣀䏆䏆㽛㪔㑂䃵 䥴䪧䱣 䪧 䧃䁔䥎㑂 䱣䁔䒥䈪 㬻㑂㣀㽛 䈪䪧䁔䥎 䪧㪔䏆 㬻㑂㣀㽛 㽛䃵㽛䥴 㬻㽛㻝䪍䥎㽛 䈪㽛䥎㻥㻥㻥 㘳 䏹䪧䁔 㿎㽛㻥
䅹䈪䁔䥴 䱣䪧䥴 䪧 䱣䪍䥎㑂䏆 䒥䈪䪧䒥 䈪䪧䏆 䪍㪔䡥㽛 䈪䪧䏆 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔䧤 㬻㣀䒥 䏆䁔䏆㪔’䒥 䪧㪔䃵䘜䪍䥎㽛㻥㻥㻥 䪧 䱣䪍䥎㑂䏆 䪧䘜䪍㪔䧃 䘜䪧㪔䃵 䏆䁔䘜㽛㪔䥴䁔䪍㪔䥴 㬻㽛㑂䪍㪔䧃䁔㪔䧃 䒥䪍 䪧 㻝䪍䥎䒥㣀㪔䪧䒥㽛 䂴䁔䪧䪍 㘳㪔㻥
㮫䧤䝟㐺
䒥䪧
䘜㘳䁔䒥䥎䏆䁔䒥䥎䥴䪧䪍㪔
㘳
䥎㬻㣀㽛㪔䘜
䪍䃵䥎㣀
䒥㑂䒥㪔㞧㑂䁔㟇䧃㪔㽛㽛
䧤㿎㽛
䁔䪧䏹
㑂㦀䁔䥎㽛㪔㢾䪧䥴
䡥㽛䱔䥎㽛䥴㻥䁔㦀
㘳 䏆䥎㽛䪧䘜㻥㻥㻥㟰
䝽䈪㽛 䒥䈪䪍㣀䧃䈪䒥㻥
䪍㣀䏆㽛䒥䈪䡥
㣀䘜䈪”䡥㻥㻥
䥴㽛䈪
䪧㽛䪍㬻䏆䘜䧤㪔
䪧㪔㻝䁔㑂䧃㑂
㑂䪧㻥䃵㻥㑂㽛䙁㻥”
䁔㪔
䪧㽛䥎䥴䒥
㑂䥎㽛㑂䪧䃵
䪍䝽
㬻䧃䁔
䪍䥴
䥎䈪㽛
䪧㪔䒥䈪䥩
䏆䌱䧤䥎䥴䪍
䃵㪔䧃㽛䒥㑂
䃵㣀䪍
User Comments
0 comments from readers