CHAPTER TWO
couldnt either if you were me.”
quot;Youre rum little creatures, you ; remarked Bree.
a (;I t on t saddle again.quot; And o do so. quot;ts good. ts very good,quot; urf and ;You ougo oo, Sa,quot; ed. quot;Its most refreshing.”
But Sa burst out laug;You do look funny when youre on your back!”
quot;I look not,quot; said Bree. But t Sa, blotle.
quot;Does it really look funny?quot; he asked in an anxious voice.
quot;Yes, it does,quot; replied Sa. quot;But matter?”
quot;You dont t; said Bree, quot;t it migalking rick Ive learned from t o find, o Narnia, t Ive picked up a lot of loa? ly, no spare my feelings. Salking kind - do roll?”
quot; t it if I to get t. Do you knohe way?”
quot;I knoo taser t comes t. O some of tains t!
to Narnia and top us t Id be glad to be past tashbaan.
You and I are safer aies.”
quot;Cant ?”
quot;Not going along ake us into cultivated land and main roads; and I kno o creep along t. Up not ss and gulls and a fe starting?”
Sas legs acerribly as o t to at a soft pace all afternoon. racks into a valley and found a village. Before t into it Sa dismounted and entered it on foot to buy a loaf and some onions and radisrotted round by t Sa at t.
t days for Sa, and every day better t as en. Even at training Bree still said like a bag of flour in t;And even if it ; But in spite of ient teaceaca learned to trot, to canter, to jump, and to kee