CHAPTER FOUR
lmarines rees and tains, and o cover up even t alloo be spoken of.”
quot;O,quot; said Caspian. quot;And I am glad it rue, even if it is all over.”
quot;Many of your race ,quot; said Doctor Cornelius.
quot;But, Doctor,quot; said Caspian, quot;elmarine too.”
quot;Am I?quot; said tor.
quot;ell, youre a Man any; said Caspian.
quot;Am I?quot; repeated tor in a deeper voice, at t t Caspian could see .
All at once Caspian realized trut t to long before. Doctor Cornelius , and s came into t. One of terror - quot; a real man, not a man at all, me up o kill me.quot; t - quot;till, and Ive seen one at last.”
quot;So youve guessed it in t; said Doctor Cornelius. quot;Or guessed it nearly rig a pure D battles and lived on, sending to be men. telmarines. I am one of true Dill alive anyraitor. But never in all tten our oures of Narnia, and t days of freedom.”
quot;Im - Im sorry, Doctor,quot; said Caspian. quot;It my fault, you know.”
quot;I am not saying t; ansor. quot;You may I ly, because my old memories so long t it ac if I did not secondly, for t elmarine things.”
quot;I do, I do,quot; said Caspian. quot;But how can I help?”
quot;You can be kind to ts of try to find a rees once more. You can searco see if any Fauns or talking Beasts or Dwarfs are perill alive in hiding.”
quot;Do you t; asked Caspian eagerly.
quot;I dont kno kno; said tor ;Sometimes I am afraid t be. I ra