CHAPTER SEVEN
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.
quot;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.
quot;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 coming 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.
quot;But just as I o put my feet into ter I looked do t as ts all rig only means I on underneat one, and Ill o get out of it too. So 1 scratcore again and tifully and out I stepped and left it lying beside t doo the.
quot;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.
quot;t I dont kno spoke - quot;You me undress you.”
I I ty nearly desperate no lay flat doo let .
quot;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 coming away.”
quot;I knoly ; said Edmund.
quot;ell, ly stuff rig as I t Id done it myself times, only t - and t as a peeled sc like t mucende